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The hydrogen ion H+ is without electrons.
Alkali metals lose one electron when it becomes an ion.
Hydrogen is a funny critter. It always has one proton, and it usually has no neutrons. But rarely it can have one neutron, and even more rarely, it can have two neutrons. There is more. Hydrogen can appear either as just the proton having loaned out its electron to become a positive ion (H+), or it can at times borrow an electron and become a negative ion (H-). That means the ion might have two electrons, but usually it has no electrons.
An ion.
your mom is an electron and i am her proton we keep eachother going
The hydrogen ion H+ is without electrons.
A sulfur atom gains 2 electrons when it becomes a sulfide ion.
no electron is present in the outer most shell of hydrogen ion
Hydrogen usually loses its single electron to become a hydrogen ion, H+.
Alkali metals lose one electron when it becomes an ion.
an ion
When sodium becomes an ion, it loses one electron to fulfill the octet rule. A neutral sodium ion has 11 electrons, so an ion will have 10.
An atom can become an ion by either gaining or losing electrons. If it gains electrons, it becomes an anion. If it loses electrons, it becomes a cation. An ion is merely an atom with a charge, either positive or negative.
The Gain Is The Hydrogen Molecualer Acid Which Relseases On The Molecule causing A Reacting Of The Number Of Gains The Eectrons Hydrogenat.
i'm not sure the comparison, but the contrast is hydrogen loses electrons while hydroxide gains electrons.
it becomes an ion
An ION. Ions are divided into two classes. CATIONS ;positive ions e.g. Na^(+) ANIONS ; negative ions e.g Cl^(-)