4 neutrons in 3Li7 isotope.
Lithium 6 and lithium 7 are isotopes of lithium. The main difference between them is in the number of neutrons in their nuclei - lithium-6 has 3 neutrons, while lithium-7 has 4 neutrons. Lithium-7 is more abundant in nature than lithium-6.
The isotope of lithium with 3 neutrons is lithium-6. It has 3 protons, 3 electrons, and 3 neutrons in its nucleus. It is one of the two stable isotopes of lithium, along with lithium-7.
No. There are different isotopes of lithium which have different numbers of neutrons and thus different masses. There are two stable isotopes of lithium: Lithium-6 with 3 neutrons and Lithium-7 with 4 neutrons.
Lithium has 3 protons and typically 4 neutrons in its nucleus.
Li-6 has 3 neutrons and Li-7 has 4 neutrons.
Lithium has 4 neutrons.
Lithium typically has 3 or 4 neutrons because lithium has an atomic number of 3, meaning it has 3 protons in its nucleus. Neutrons help stabilize the nucleus of an atom, and having 3 or 4 neutrons allows lithium to have a stable configuration.
4 neutrons in the most stable isotope of lithium (3Li7)
An atom of lithium isotope 6Li has 3 electrons and 3 protons and 3 neutrons.
Lithium has 3 protons, 4 neutrons, and 3 electrons.
6Li has 3 protons, neutrons and electrons. 7Li has 3 protons, 4 neutrons and 3 electrons.
6.941 is the average mass of lithium's isotopes. The majority of lithium (on average about 92.5%) is lithium-7 with 3 protons and 4 neutrons while about 7.5% is lithium-6 with 3 protons and 3 neutrons. A number of other isotopes exist but only in trace amounts.