THANK YOU!!
Nitrogen has five electrons in its outer shell and bromine has seven in its outer shell.
Nitrogen has 5 electrons in its outer shell, and Bromine has 7 electrons in its outer shell.
An atom of nitrogen has 5 electrons in its outer shell. This makes nitrogen a nonmetal and means it requires 3 more electrons to fill its outer shell and become stable.
Nitrogen has atomic number = 7. The outer shell has 5 electrons, it requires 3 more electrons to complete the outer energy shell.
Outer electrons, or Valence Electrons, for nitrogen is 5 electrons. The first electron level requires 2 electrons, an electron pair, to fill it and move on to the next level. Nitrogen has 7 electrons, so 7-2=5.
Nitrogen has 5 electrons in its outer shell, so there are 3 electron pairs in the outer shell of nitrogen.
7 electrons in total, 5 in the outer shell. Nitrogen is in group 15.
Nitrogen is a nonmetal with 5 valance electrons, which tends to receive three electrons to complete it outer electron shell.
no, it has three p electrons
Phosphorous
Nitrogen needs 3 more electrons to fill its outer shell. It has 5 electrons in its outer shell, and it typically needs a total of 8 electrons to achieve a full outer shell (octet rule).
there are 5 electrons in the outermost shell of electrically neutral nitrogen atom.