B Can all elements, (not including gases) form Ionic Bonds?

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Calcium and iron, gold and radium, and sodium and tin can potentially form ionic bonds under the right conditions, but several factors influence whether a bond will actually form. Ionic bonds require specific energy conditions and the presence of free energy for a reaction to occur, as there are activation barriers that must be overcome. Atoms do not bond simply upon contact due to these energy requirements and the need for existing bonds to break before new ones can form. The interaction between different elements is not automatic; it depends on their respective properties and energy states. Understanding these principles is crucial for grasping the nature of ionic bonding.
cj20x2
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I've been looking all over the internet, can calcium and iron form an ionic bond, Gold and Radium, Sodium and Tin. If those elements happened to run into each other.

Also, another thing I don't understand is why don't the atoms in my hand bond with atoms on the wall when they come into contact.
 
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Do you know the definition of an ionic bond?
 
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cj20x2 said:
Also, another thing I don't understand is why don't the atoms in my hand bond with atoms on the wall when they come into contact.
Generally speaking, most chemical reactions have activation barriers: there is a minimum energy required for the chemical reaction to take place. There are molecular bonds to break before new ones can form. Also, a reaction may not be favorable because the energy of the products might be higher than the energy of the reactants.
 
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ProfuselyQuarky said:
Do you know the definition of an ionic bond?

I'm having a hard time getting the wording right for what I'm trying to ask. Basically if possible, if you were to take a single instance of an element, and make it interact with a completely different element would it automatically create a bond between the 2 or are there other things that determine if the elements will bond or not.
 
cj20x2 said:
I'm having a hard time getting the wording right for what I'm trying to ask. Basically if possible, if you were to take a single instance of an element, and make it interact with a completely different element would it automatically create a bond between the 2 or are there other things that determine if the elements will bond or not.
No, it depends. That has everything to do with the availability or absence of free energy. See @DrClaude's post. Is that the answer you're looking for?
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
I am attempting to use a Raman TruScan with a 785 nm laser to read a material for identification purposes. The material causes too much fluorescence and doesn’t not produce a good signal. However another lab is able to produce a good signal consistently using the same Raman model and sample material. What would be the reason for the different results between instruments?
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