There are different electrons in the outer shell of each element.
One
7 electrons in total, 5 in the outer shell. Nitrogen is in group 15.
2 outer shell electrons
The outermost shell of any noble gas is completely filled. And because of this, we can say that they have 8 electrons in their outer shells, with the exception of helium, which has 2 electrons in its outer shell.
It is a Group 2 element, therefore it has two outer-shell electrons. To gain a full outer-shell, it loses two electrons to form a cation (cations are positive ions)
There are different electrons in the outer shell of each element.
Fluorine and Chlorine are in the 7th group. They have 7 electrons in outer shell.
There are four electrons found on the outer shell of a atomic structure of tin. They are in a group of four.
The group number determines how many electrons are on the outer shell of the atom. Because Hydrogen only has 1 electron, it has 1 electron on it's outer shell. (Therefor classed in group 1)
2 or 8
One
7 electrons in total, 5 in the outer shell. Nitrogen is in group 15.
There are 5, it is in group 5 on the periodic table of the elements
5 because it is in group 5 on the periodic table
It depends, most atoms need 8 total valence electrons in their outer shell (some need 2). So subtract the number they have (determined by the group that the element is in) from 8 and that is how many they need to fill their outer shell!
Germanium is a group 14 element. It's electron structure is [Ar] 3d10 4s2 4p2. Therefore, it has 2 electron's in its outer shell.
2 outer shell electrons