Negative.
After chlorine accepts the electron from sodium, it becomes a chloride ion with a negative charge of -1.
Chlorine become chloride through gaining an electron. In a chemical reaction, a chlorine atom accepts an electron from another atom or molecule, forming a chloride ion with a negative charge. This process of gaining an electron facilitates the transformation of chlorine into chloride.
Chlorine's charge after accepting an electron is -1, as it gains one negative charge when it accepts an electron to achieve a stable electron configuration.
The neutral atom then takes on a negative charge because the incoming electron has a negetive charge.
Iodide (I⁻) has a negative charge of -1. This occurs because it gains an extra electron, resulting in a net negative charge. As a halogen, iodide readily accepts an electron to achieve a stable electron configuration.
The electron is not a chemical element: it is a small elementary particle with a negative electrical charge.
If an element is missing one electron, which is defined as having a negative charge, then the element is a positively charged ion. If an element gains an extra electron, it will have a negative charge and be a negative ion. An element with an equal number of positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons is considered to be a neutral element (in other words, no charge). By the way, no charge for this answer!
It depends on the charge on the atom at the start before it gains an electron. The electron has a charge of -1, and will make an atom more negative or less positive (both of which are the same thing). Let's look at the possibilities. If an atom is neutral (zero net charge) and gains an electron, it has a net charge of -1. If an atom is at +1 and gains an electron, it has a net charge of zero. If an atom has any positive charge, p, above +1, it has a net charge of p - 1. (A +5 would become a +4, and a +3 would become a +2.) If an atom has any negative charge, n, then its net charge becomes n - 1. (A -4 would become a -5, and a -2 would become a -3.)
To work out the specific charge of a given element, you will take the positive electron charge and multiply it by the negative electron charge. This can be calculated by the formula q=ne
An element that forms an anion gains electrons to achieve a full outer electron shell, resulting in a negative charge. Anions are generally larger in size compared to their corresponding neutral atoms due to the addition of extra electrons. These anions tend to have higher electron affinity and may participate in ionic bonding with cations to form compounds.
When "x" valence electrons are lost the charge is +x When "x" valence electrons are gained the charge is -x for example, if chlorine gained one electron, the charge would be Cl 1- or, if magnesium lost two electrons, the charge would be Mg 2+
The Proton carries a Positive charge. An Electron has a Negative charge, and a Neutron has no charge … it's Neutral.