Krypton has 36 protons, 36 neutrons, and 42 neutrons.
You need to get 78 large Styrofoam balls (36 for protons and 42 for neutrons) and glue them all together. Then get 36 small balls (for the electrons) and attach them to a wooden stick. Now put the wooden sticks into the protons and you have your model.
i have kinda the same ? but all i have so far is that it forms a compound with fluorine to make krypton difluoride and krypton tetrafluoride
Krypton can form compounds with fluorine, such as krypton difluoride (KrF2). These compounds are usually unstable and have unique properties due to krypton's noble gas nature.
it explodes
To create a basic atom model for krypton, you can represent its 36 electrons (2 in the first shell, 8 in the second shell, 18 in the third shell, and 8 in the fourth shell) around a nucleus composed of 36 protons and neutrons. A simple way to represent this model is by using different colored beads or balls to represent protons, neutrons, and electrons, with the appropriate number for each particle based on the atomic number of krypton.
The compound with the formula KrF4 is called krypton tetrafluoride. It is a chemical compound consisting of one krypton atom bonded to four fluorine atoms.
- it is a practically inert gas
Fractional Distillation. When you boil all of the water, nitrogen, oxygen, helium, and argon out of the air, you are left with krypton.
Krypton Tetrafluoride
Lithium has a lower electronegativity than krypton. The electronegativity for lithium is 0.98; the electronegativity for krypton is 3.0. Note that most noble gases in group 18 have no electronegativity at all since the do not make compounds. However, since krypton and xenon do make compounds under some circumstances, they do have a measurable electronegativity.
to make a long story short it blew up
Krypton is not used to make computer chips. Computer chips are typically made using semiconductors like silicon, which have specific electrical properties that make them well-suited for this purpose. Krypton is primarily used in lighting, such as in fluorescent lights and high-intensity discharge lamps.
The abbreviation for krypton is Kr.