An isotope of an element is same as the element in that it has the same number of protons.
An isotope of an element is different from the element in that it has a different number of neutrons.
Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons and elections but a different number of neutrons.
This means there is no difference in the way that they react with other elements or compounds as the electron configuration has not changed.
The only difference is their new Atomic Mass.
eg. Cl has isotopes of cl35 and cl37 but they will form the exactly same compounds.
The basic difference between the isotopes of an element is the number of neutrons. They have similar number of protons and electrons and they show similar chemical behavior (but differed physical behavior).
They have the same number of protons and electrons.
They have the same chemical properties. They have the same number of protons.
The isotopes of the same element have an identical number of protons and electtrons; the number of neutrons is different.
Isotopes of the same element differ in the number of neutrons. Isotopes have different physical properties but similar chemical properties.
Isotopes of an element have different numbers of neutrons.
No! Nuclides with different element names are never isotopes of each other, because their nuclei contain different numbers of protons and therefore are not chemically alike.
You would also need to know the abundance of each of the isotopes, i.e., how much percent of each you will typically encounter.
Isotopes of each element.
Isotopes of the same element differ in the number of neutrons. Isotopes have different physical properties but similar chemical properties.
They will have a different number of neutrons.
The number of protons is the same.
The numbers of protons and electrons are identical.
Isotopes of an element have different numbers of neutrons.
They are isotopes of each other
No they don't have. Isotopes of an element differ in mass from from each other and this is due to the different no. of electrons in their nucleus.
No! Nuclides with different element names are never isotopes of each other, because their nuclei contain different numbers of protons and therefore are not chemically alike.
They have the same formulas but different organic structures.
Because chlorine (like almost every other element) exists as several isotopes. The molar mass reflects the combined weight and proportion of each of those isotopes.
You would also need to know the abundance of each of the isotopes, i.e., how much percent of each you will typically encounter.
Isotopes of each element.