Iridium is a chemical element with the symbol Ir and an atomic number of 77. This element has 3 unpaired electrons.
I assume you are referring to the diatomic molecule I2, which is Iodine in its natural state. There is a single bonding pair of electrons and a total of 6 non-bonding electron pairs.
One.
One (1)
There are 3 unpaired electrons.
zero - there are no unpaired electrons
three unpaired electrons
6 unpaired electrons
A silicon atom has 4 unpaired electrons.
There are 3 unpaired electrons.
zero - there are no unpaired electrons
three unpaired electrons
There are no unpaired electrons in strontium.
6 unpaired electrons
A silicon atom has 4 unpaired electrons.
3 unpaired electrons
they're are zero unpaired electrons.
5 unpaired electrons There are 5 unpaired electrons in the Fe3+ ion. The reason for this is that Iron has the electron configuration Ar3d5.
There are 5 unpaired electrons in Fe^3+ in its ground state.
Indium always has 49 protons and usually has 49 electrons, but the number of electrons can change in indium ions.
Cesium has 1 unpaired electron.