
table of contents
Physical properties:3
Chemical properties:4
Physical and chemical changes:5
Family, period, state of matter, type of element:6
Atomic number, atomic mass:7
Number of protons, electrons, neutrons:8
Bohr-Rutherford diagram:9
How Fluorine was discovered:10
Three compounds containing Fluorine:11
Common uses:12
Facts:13
affects on the environment:14
Glossary:15-16
Once apon a time there was an element named Fluorine. Fluorine is a pale yellow gas that smelled really bad.
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES

Fluorine is a poisonous gas, it is pale yellow and it is the most chemically reactive of all the elements. Fluorine forms compounds with most other elements, even with the noble gases krypton, xenon and radon. It is so reactive that glass, metals, and even water, and other substances, burn with a bright flame in a jet of fluorine gas.
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES

When mixed with almost any other element even noble gases, Fluorine will react and burn a bright flame
PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL CHANGES

FAMILY, PERIOD, STATE OF MATTER AND TYPE OF ELEMENT
Fluorine is part of the Halogen family and the second period. Fluorine is mostly found as a gas but at −188.11°C it can boil and become a liquid. Fluorine is a gas so it is a nonmetal.

ATOMIC NUMBER AND ATOMIC MASS
Fluorine's atomic number is 9. Fluorine also has a atomic mass of 18.99 or 19. the atomic number represents the amount of protons in the nucleus. The atomic mass represents the weight of the components of the atom which is mostly made up the nucleus

NUMBER OF PROTONS, ELECTRONS AND NEUTRONS
Fluorine's atomic number is 9 which means that there are 9 protons and 9 electrons and it's atomic weight is 19 so 19-9=10 there are 10 neutrons in Fluorine atoms.
BOHR-RUTHERFORD DIAGRAM

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table of contents
Physical properties:3
Chemical properties:4
Physical and chemical changes:5
Family, period, state of matter, type of element:6
Atomic number, atomic mass:7
Number of protons, electrons, neutrons:8
Bohr-Rutherford diagram:9
How Fluorine was discovered:10
Three compounds containing Fluorine:11
Common uses:12
Facts:13
affects on the environment:14
Glossary:15-16
Once apon a time there was an element named Fluorine. Fluorine is a pale yellow gas that smelled really bad.
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES

Fluorine is a poisonous gas, it is pale yellow and it is the most chemically reactive of all the elements. Fluorine forms compounds with most other elements, even with the noble gases krypton, xenon and radon. It is so reactive that glass, metals, and even water, and other substances, burn with a bright flame in a jet of fluorine gas.
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES

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