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noble gas

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noble gas

Any of a group of six elements (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon), originally named ‘inert’ because they were thought not to enter into any chemical reactions. This is now known to be incorrect: in 1962, xenon was made to combine with fluorine, and since then, compounds of argon, krypton, and radon with fluorine and/or oxygen have been described.

The extreme unreactivity of the noble gases is due to the stability of their electronic structure. All the electron shells (energy levels) of inert gas atoms are full and, except for helium, they all have eight electrons in their outermost (valency) shell. The apparent stability of this electronic arrangement led to the formulation of the octet rule to explain the different types of chemical bond found in simple compounds. The noble gases are in Group 0 of the periodic table of the elements.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
he researchers found that the normally unreactive, noble gas
might make the element's chemistry closer to that of a noble gas, like radon.
Even as Caldicott discusses the medical effects of radioactive noble gas emissions, she misstates that these isotopes are gamma emitters instead of the less hazardous beta emissions.
 
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