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Many atoms have the same number of protons and electrons (neutrons are irrelevant) and if there are more protons than electrons, the atom is positively charged. If there are more electrons than protons, the atom is negatively charged. These are called ions.

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13y ago
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12y ago

net means overall. As in force, net force, Fnet, so it might be the same for net charge.as in a neutral atom the net charge is 0(b'coz magnitude of charge of protons(+ve) and magnitude of electrons(-ve) is 0.)

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13y ago

Net charge on an atom is the difference between the number of an atom's valence electrons and its electrons in a particular configuration.

Example: Nitrite anion -O-N=O. The charge on the single bonded Oxygen: 6 valence electrons - 7 ( tree lone pairs=6 electrons + 1 electron from the single bond to Nitrogen) = -1. The charge on the Nitrogen: 5 valence electrons - 5 (2 electrons from the double bond + 1 electron from the single bond + 2 electrons from the lone pair) = 0. The charge on the double bonded Oxygen: 6 valence electrons - 6 (two lone pairs = 4 electrons + 2 electrons from the double bond) = 0. Hence the total charge on the molecule -1.

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11y ago

Charge distributions can be broken into two basic categories: Discrete and Continuous.

If you have a discrete charge distribution, then you know that are an integer number of charges in some arrangement. For instance, you might have 3 charges placed at the vertexes of an equilateral triangle. You can simply sum the charge of each of the three charges. If the charges have electric charge q1, q2, and q3, then qtotal = q1 + q2 + q3.

If you have a continuous charge distribution, then either clever symmetry or calculus is required to determine total charge. Three common charge distributions are:

  1. Linear charge distribution. Consider a narrow rod of length L. The charge per unit length may be given, lambda. The total charge is then the length of the rod times lambda: L*lambda.
  2. Surface charge distribution. Consider a surface with surface charge density sigma. If the total surface area which contains charge is S, then the total charge is S*sigma.
  3. Volume charge distribution. Consider a volume with surface charge density rho. If the total volume which contains charge is V, then the total charge is V*rho.

If the problem is not stated in terms of a uniform charge distribution or it is not simply decomposed into the above three domains then integration is necessary. Depending on whether the problem is stated in terms of 1D, 2D or 3D, you will be calculating a path integral, surface integral, or volume integral. In general, alpha is some charge per unit (length, area, density), then the total charge is the (path, surface, or volume) integral of alpha integrated over the entire (path, surface, or volume) with respect to the (path, surface, or volume) element defined for preferred coordinate system. If alpha is uniform and independent of position then the problem simplifies considerably (finding the path length, surface area, or volume) and then multiplying it by alpha. However, if alpha is position dependent then you could find yourself with a nasty integral which may require numerical methods to solve.

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8y ago

An element, in its native state, will not have a net charge, i.e. it is zero. If the element is combined, you can find the oxidation number (or valence) however.

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15y ago

you can't find the charge of the atom

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12y ago

Add the number of protons and neutrons.

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Q: How can I find net charge of an element?
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How to find the total electron in element?

To find the total number of electrons in an element, first you need to look up the element's atomic number. That number tells you how many protons are in the element. Then, look up the net charge of the element. The number of protons subtracted by the elements net charge will give you the number of its electrons.


How do you find net charge?

The net charge is the total amount of charge that the ion will have. So you will find out the charge of each group and add them all together for the net charge.


What is the overall charge for MgF2?

Mg as an element is zero oxygen as an element is likewise zero Mg as an ion +2 Oxgen as an ion -2 MgO compound net zero


How do you find the net charge?

The net charge is the sum of all individual charges. If one charge is slightly positive and the other charge is slightly negative, the overall charge will be neutral.


If the element sulfur S was to lose two electrons per atom what would the net ionic charge be?

The charge will be +2.


What is the element with charge if needed with 23 protons 28 neutrons and 18 electrons with a net charge of 3 plus?

No element or ion as stated can exist, because if it contains 23 protons and only 18 electrons, its net charge must be 23 - 18 = 5 plus, not 3 plus.


What element has a full valence shell with electrons?

Helium. (A hydride ion has the same electronic configuration, but hydride is not an element since it has a net electric charge.)


What element has 15 protons 16 neutrons and a net charge of negative 3?

phosphorus 3-


What net charge does a sodium atom have?

A sodium atom has a net charge of zero. A sodium ion has a net charge of 1+.


Is one property of an electron a net charge of 0?

No an electron does not have a net charge of 0, in fact it has a net charge of -1.


How do you find how many electrons an atom has?

Knowing which element it is and its formal charge, subtract the charge from its atomic number.


The majority of matter has a net charge of what?

The MAJORITY of matter has a net charge of ZERO.