Chlorine has total of 17 electrons
Chlorine (Cl) has 17 electrons in its shells.
Chlorine will not for Cl-7 ion. It will form Cl-1 ion, which has total of 18 electrons.
Cl has 7 electrons. If you draw Cl^-, there are 8 electrons and a minus 1 charge. What do you want to draw? And what do you mean by "odd" electrons?
The number of electrons is 18.
Chloride anion has 8 valence electrons.
Just 1.
In a Cl-Cl molecule, the atoms are sharing 2 electrons, forming a single covalent bond. Each chlorine atom contributes 1 electron to the bond, resulting in a total of 2 shared electrons between the two atoms.
Cl- has 8 valence electrons. This is because chlorine, in its neutral state, has 7 valence electrons (group 17), and the -1 charge of the chloride ion indicates the addition of an extra electron.
8
Chlorine is a non metal element. There are 17 electrons in a single atom.
Cl-35 isotope has 18 neutrons Cl-37 isotope has 20 neutrons
Since Be is in the 2nd group, it should have 2 valence electrons and Cl should have 7 (in 7th group), and since there is 2 Cl, then there is 14. Add 14 Cl electrons and 2 Be electrons to get 16 electrons (valence, not total)