Chemistry, asked by yashpannu17, 4 months ago

moving from li to k which element would lose electrons easily to form charged atoms

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Answered by thriveda
0

Trends In The Chemical Properties Of The Elements

reactivity series of metals

As mentioned above, the characteristic chemical property of a metal atom is to lose one or more of its electrons to form a positive ion. However, certain metals lose electrons much more readily than others. In particular, cesium (Cs) can give up its valence electron more easily than can lithium (Li). In fact, for the alkali metals (the elements in Group 1), the ease of giving up an electron varies as follows:

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Answered by ltzSweetAngel
1

Answer:

=>The most common reducing agents are metals, for they tend to lose electrons in their reactions with nonmetals. The most common oxidizing agents are halogens—such as fluorine (F2), chlorine (Cl2), and bromine (Br2)—and certain oxy anions, such as the permanganate ion (MnO4−) and the dichromate ion (Cr2O72−).

=>Elements that are metals tend to lose electrons and become positively charged ions called cations. Elements that are nonmetals tend to gain electrons and become negatively charged ions called anions. Metals that are located in column 1A of the periodic table form ions by losing one electron.

=>Lithium ion | Li+ - PubChem.

=>Atomic number of fluorine (F) is 9, with electronic configuration; 2,7. Therefore, fluorine has a tendency to gain one electron to form a stable configuration with 8 electrons in the outermost shell.

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