Yea.
4 electrons
Carbon has 4 valence electrons.
Yes, carbon has 4 valence electrons in its outer shell.
No. Carbon has 4 electrons in its outer shell (valence shell).
im almost positive that you would use 10 electrons. carbon has 4 valence electrons but since you have to that makes eight, and then of course the 1 valence for each of the hydrogen atoms, 2, so that gives you ten
valency of carbon is positive as it gives it electron so it is positively charge
There are four valence electrons because it is in 4A row. 5A 5 valence 6A 6 valence etc. Carbon has four.
nitrogen has 5 valence electrons. carbon has 4 valence electrons.
A carbon atom has 4 valence electrons. So, for a C6 molecule, there will be a total of 6 carbon atoms, and each carbon atom will contribute 4 valence electrons, giving a total of 24 valence electrons in the C6 molecule.
All of them. They all have valence electrons, of ns2, np2
Symbol of carbon is C its valency is +4
A carbon needs 8 electrons to have a solid shell so it usually form 4 other bonds to combine with the 4 electrons it already has