The
alkali
metals
are
silvery
colored,
soft,
low
density
metals,
which
react
readily
with
halogens
to
form
ionic
salts,
and
with
water
to
form
strongly
alkaline(basic)
hydroxides.
These
elements
all
have
one
electron
in
their
outermost
shell,
so
the
energetically
preferred
state
of
achieving
a
filled
electron
shell
is
to
lose
one
electron
to
form
a
singly
charged
positive
ion.
Hydrogen,
with
a
solitary
electron,
nominally
belongs
in
the
alkali
metals
group.
However,
removal
of
that
single
electron
requires
considerably
more
energy
than
for
the
other
alkali
metals.
Like
the
halogens,
only
one
additional
electron
is
required
to
fill
in
the
outermost
shell
of
the
hydrogen
atom,
so
hydrogen
can
be
regarded
in
some
respects
as
behaving
like
a
halogen;
its
elemental
form
is
a
diatomic
gas,
and
it
can
even
form
salts
(called
hydrides)
with
the
alkali
metals,
where
the
metal
has
donated
an
electron
to
the
hydrogen,
almost
as
if
hydrogen
were
actually
a
halogen.
In
the
form
of
metallic
hydrogen,
however,
it
behaves
more
as
an
alkali
metal.