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If there are any elements that lie directly below francium, then, yes, they would produce a more reactive reaction. But, because no elements have yet been discovered, it the the one which is the most reactive.

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Posted

the most reactive metal known to man is francium. the most reactive nonmetal known to man is fluorine.

 

tell me if i'm wrong, but i believe that there are an unlimited number of elements since you could keep adding protons to a nucleus in one way or another. as a result, you could get an element with one valence electron that also has a greater atomic radius than francium, which would be more metallic than francium and thus would be more reactive than francium.

 

i do not believe that there is a possible nonmetal that is more active than fluorine since fluorine has the smallest atomic radius for an element with an outermost orbital that is p and has 5 electrons. hydrogen would be more active than fluorine if it didn't have such a low ionization energy, but since it does, it tends not to form hydride ions.

Posted
tell me if i'm wrong, but i believe that there are an unlimited number of elements since you could keep adding protons to a nucleus in one way or another. as a result, you could get an element with one valence electron that also has a greater atomic radius than francium, which would be more metallic than francium and thus would be more reactive than francium.

 

YEs, it could go on forever, but, I think there comes a stage where the atom becomes so big, that, the second a proton enters it, one is fired out.

 

i do not believe that there is a possible nonmetal that is more active than fluorine since fluorine has the smallest atomic radius for an element with an outermost orbital that is p and has 5 electrons.

 

Yeah, its exactly the opposite with non-metals. For metals, you try to have a higher number of shells, but for non-metals, the smallest number. Pretty cool of you should tell me!

Posted
YEs, it could go on forever, but, I think there comes a stage where the atom becomes so big, that, the second a proton enters it, one is fired out.

oh, of course; but hey, that new element was in existence...even though it only existed for a fraction of a second.

 

Yeah, its exactly the opposite with non-metals. For metals, you try to have a higher number of shells, but for non-metals, the smallest number. Pretty cool of you should tell me!

right, and so, since F is the most active possible nonmetal, the most active metal must be more active than F since mathematically, the most reactive metal has an infinately large atomic radius

Posted
right, and so, since F is the most active possible nonmetal, the most active metal must be more active than F since mathematically, the most reactive metal has an infinately large atomic radius

 

umm.... yes, i think so. Your theory makes sense.

Posted

I so thought the inital question used a group 2 metal not a group one, for the calculation dont use the molar mass of Na(OH)2 use NaOH, so the pH will not have a 2 x molarity, i though it was 2+(OH)2 my mistake have to look more carefully :)

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