Carbon needs 4 covalent bonds to fill its outer shell.
the four electrons in its outer shell
Carbon has 4 electrons in its outer shell - making four bonds would give it the octet.
it can react with up to four other atoms to form covalent bonds(:
Ionic and covalent bonds both result in a full outer electron shell.
4 Carbon has 4 covalent bonds. Altogether Carbon has 6 electrons, 2 in the inner (1st) shell and 4 in the outer (2nd) shell. It takes 8 electrons in the outer shell to make elements stable (excluding Hydrogen and Helium) so Carbon needs 4 more electrons to make it stable - so it needs 4 more bonds, with each bond giving one more electron to be stable.
the four electrons in its outer shell
carbon atom only has four outer electrons. carbon form 4 covalent bonds to gain a complete outer shell & can only form 4 bonds
Yes. It's very rare that they form more, or less than 4 covalent bonds, as this could create a charge on the carbon atom, making it unstable. The reason the number is 4 is because carbon has 4 electrons in its outer shell, meaning it needs another 4 to fill this outer shell. The bonds tend to be covalent, because carbon does not like carrying a charge, so it would not form a stable ionic bond.
A carbon atom needs four electrons to have a full outer shell so I guess it can form a maximum of four bonds.
Carbon has 4 electrons in its outer shell - making four bonds would give it the octet.
Carbon has 4 valence electrons, allowing it to form 4 covalent bonds to achieve a full outer shell, which is more stable. By sharing electrons with other atoms, carbon can achieve a total of 8 electrons in its outer shell, following the octet rule.
it can react with up to four other atoms to form covalent bonds(:
Most commonly covalent bonds. Occasionally it forms polar covalent bonds. And if Carbon is feeling particularly nasty it forms ionic bonds. Why? Because Carbon does whatever the f*** it wants. You are welcome.
Ionic and covalent bonds both result in a full outer electron shell.
4 Carbon has 4 covalent bonds. Altogether Carbon has 6 electrons, 2 in the inner (1st) shell and 4 in the outer (2nd) shell. It takes 8 electrons in the outer shell to make elements stable (excluding Hydrogen and Helium) so Carbon needs 4 more electrons to make it stable - so it needs 4 more bonds, with each bond giving one more electron to be stable.
Ionic and covalent bonds both result in a full outer electron shell.
Because its outer shell can hold up to eight electrons, carbon can share electrons with up to four other atoms. Therefore, it can from four covalent bonds.