2 in the first shell .every shell after that can have a maximum of 8.
The number of electrons that can occupy each shell in an atom is determined by the formula 2n2, where n is the shell number.
Each sulfur atom has 6 electrons in its outermost shell.
An electrically neutral oxygen atom has eight electrons, one for each proton in its nucleus. Two electrons are in the inner shell and six are in the outer shell.
If you are asking about the number of electrons then it would be 8. The first shell can hold a maximum number of 2 electrons. The second and third shell would have a maximum of 8 electrons each.
there are 8 electrons in the valence shell of neon
The very inner shell of an atom is the 1st shell and can only contain 2 electrons.
The innermost shell of every atom except hydrogen consists of 2 electrons.
A silicon atom has 4 electrons in its valence shell.
There is no Iodone atom, there is however an Iodine atom that has seven valence electrons or seven electrons in outermost shell.
The K shell of an atom can hold up to 2 electrons.
Yes. The shells of an atom have different limits for how many electrons they can hold depending on the size of the shell. For example, the limit of the first shell is just two electrons, but the bigger second shell can hold eight electrons.
there are 2 electrons in the inner shell of a hydrogen atom.