H+ has 1 proton and 0 electrons.
Normal hydrogen has 1 proton and 1 electron. The number of protons always remains the same. The negative electron and the positive proton balance out the charge so that normal elemental hydrogen is neutral.
H+ is the oxidized form of hydrogen. Its electron was taken away, so now it's left with 1 proton and 0 electrons, making its charge positive.
H- is the reduced form of hydrogen. It has gained an electron, so now it has 1 positive proton and 2 negative electrons, making the charge equal to negative 1.
2H, the other stable hydrogen isotope, is known as deuterium and contains one proton and one neutron in its nucleus.
20 protons, 18 electron's, and 20 neutrons
If the ion has a +1 charge and has 107 electrons, that means that it originally had 108 electrons, and therefore has 108 protons. The mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons, 108 + 159, and therefore is equal to 267.
Only non-metal+non-metal is considered covalent. Plus, protons are NEVER shared; just the electrons.
If you dont know this answer , well i dont either :0
I've edited the question so it makes any sort of sense. The answer would be 4 electrons. You need an equal number of electrons and protons to be neutral. Neutral just means neither positive or negative. Electrons are -1 and protons are +1. The only way to not be particularly one or the other is to have them both in equal amounts.
11 protons and 10 electrons
Three protons and two electrons.
19 Protons and 20 electrons
29 protons and 27 electrons
Mn has 25 protons.
The ion carbon C4+ has 6 protons and 2 electrons.
29 protons and 27 electrons.
Protons: 20 Electrons: 18 Neutrons: 21
Be2+ ion has 4 protons and 2 electrons
Lead will always have 82 protons. If it has a 2+ charge, that means there are 2 more protons than electrons, so there are 80 electrons.
Fe 2+ (Iron) has... 26 protons 24 electrons 30 neutrons
23 electrons, 26 protons, 30 neutrons.