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Chemical properties of the noble gases

Compared to other , the in group 0 are - they are extremely .

Explaining the inertness of noble gases

When elements react, their complete their outer shells by losing, gaining, or sharing . The atoms of noble gases already have complete outer shells. They have no tendency to lose, gain, or share electrons. This is why the noble gases are inert and do not take part in chemical reactions.

The table summarises the of elements in groups 1, 7 and 0. See that:

  • atoms of group 1 and 7 elements have incomplete outer shells (so they are )
  • atoms of group 0 elements have complete outer shells (so they are unreactive)
The electron structures of helium, lithium, fluorine, neon, sodium, chlorine, argon and potassium.

Properties and uses of noble gases

The main of the noble gases include:

  • they have low
  • they are inert, so they are not

Many uses of the noble gases are linked to one or more of these properties. Argon is used as a â€shield gas’ when pieces of metal together. Argon is:

  • denser than air, so it stops air getting to the metal
  • inert, so the hot metal cannot and spoil the weld

Question

contain thin metal wires. These become very hot and glow brightly when an is passed through them. Explain why argon, krypton or xenon are used in these lamps.

A filament lamp