A xenon atom contains 54 electrons,
5 shells filled, no electrons left over.
Three electron shells would be completely filled by a neutral xenon atom.
No. there are no unpaired electrons in xenon. In neutral form, xenon will have 8 valence electrons.
Each orbital in Xenon has its full complement of electrons.
No. Xenon is a neutral element. It has completely filled valence orbitals, hence is stable. It does not form anion.
5 shells filled, no electrons left over.
Three electron shells would be completely filled by a neutral xenon atom.
No. there are no unpaired electrons in xenon. In neutral form, xenon will have 8 valence electrons.
Each orbital in Xenon has its full complement of electrons.
No. Xenon is a neutral element. It has completely filled valence orbitals, hence is stable. It does not form anion.
Xe, 54
Xenon's atomic number is 54. That means, to keep it neutral it must have 54 protons and 54 electrons. The first 54 electrons are filled into orbitals as 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p6 5s2 4d10 5p6.
The atomic number of Xenon is 54. This means the atom contains 54 protons. In order to form a neutral atom, the positive charge from the protons and the negative charge from the electrons must cancel out. In order to be neutral the atom must have 54 electrons.
Five shells and none left over.
the answer is 12!
5 shells and no electrons would be left over.
When Ionizing Xenon you can only loss electrons. A +2 or +1 ion. Incoming electrons have no inclination to stay as all inter-S orbitals are filled.