Chlorine is a metal element. There are 17 electrons in a single atom.
Chlorine atom as 17 electrons in total.
Cl has 7 valence electrons.
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?
Chloride anion has 8 valence electrons.
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Chlorine (Cl) has 17 electrons in its shells.
Two total electrons are transferred in the reaction 2NaCl. Two electrons are lost from the sodium but gained for the chloride.
You will have 8 valence electrons around Cl (it usually has 7 but gained one from Li). There are no valence electrons to show around Li because it gave it's valence electron to Cl. Answered by a chemistry teacher.
Cl has 7 valence electrons.
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?
In cl-cl bond 1 electron is sahred by each of Cl atom.
Chlorine has total of 17 electrons
-3 electrons are gained,i.e,3 electrons are lost by Al and 3 electrons are gained by the other atom nearby.
Chloride anion has 8 valence electrons.
The number of electrons is 18.
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)