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Answer
Alkali metals all have one electron in their outer shell, so they can give it up easily and produce hydrogen gas and a hydroxide. However, the ease of losing that electron changes with size: as you go down the group, the outer electron is farther from the nucleus and more shielded, making it easier to lose. Lithium at the top reacts slowly, almost like a mild soap, while sodium and potassium react rapidly and violently, and francium (if it could be tested) would react even more explosively. Thus the position in the periodic table determines how vigorously each metal reacts with water, not just the fact that they are alkali metals. A simple example: sodium metal, when dropped into water, splashes and fizzles loudly, whereas lithium metal barely fizzles and produces only a small amount of hydrogen.
Detailed Explanation
Alkali metals react with water because they lose one electron easily. Other options are incorrect because The mistake is to think every alkali metal reacts the same.
Key Concepts
Reactivity of Alkali Metals
Periodic Trends
Chemical Properties of Elements
Topic
Alkali Metals
Difficulty
easy level question
Cognitive Level
understand
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