Three electrons more than the Nitrogen atom, hence then -3 charge.
10 electrons
2 core electrons and 8 valence electrons are there in N3- ion.
All of the electrons are paired. If you are asking how many lone pairs, there are 4.
The chemical formula for a nitride ion is N-3.
The name of nitrogen ion is Nitride. The symbol is N3- .
The protons have a positive charge and the electrons have a negative charge, so it would be 7 + -5, so the charge is +2.
2 core electrons and 8 valence electrons are there in N3- ion.
All of the electrons are paired. If you are asking how many lone pairs, there are 4.
Azide, N3- ( a linear ion isoelectronic with CO2), or conceivably nitride N3- a monoatomic ion
The chemical formula for a nitride ion is N-3.
The name of nitrogen ion is Nitride. The symbol is N3- .
The N atom is electrically neutral - the number of positively charged protons is equal to the number of negatively charged electrons. That is why there is no net charge on the atom. On the other hand the N3- anion (negatively charged ion) carries a charge of minus 3. It has gain 3 electrons, thereby incurring 3 negative charges. There are 3 more electrons than protons in N3-. N3- can combine with a cation to form an ionic compound.
A nitrogen anion forms when a nitrogen atom gains three electrons, forming a nitride ion, N3-.
Seven from the nitrogen atom, eight from each of the three oxygen atoms, and one more from a metal or group that forms a nitrate salt, for a total of 32.
The protons have a positive charge and the electrons have a negative charge, so it would be 7 + -5, so the charge is +2.
Group 15 elements have 5 valence electrons. They accept three electrons and form anions of -3 charge. For example: N3- (nitride ion) or P3- (phosphide ion)
Formula = N3-
N3- if you mean nitride ion