No, Oxygen will generally gain. Oxygen has six valence electrons, which means it's missing 2 so a -2 charge.
No, oxidation is a chemical reaction that involves the loss of electrons from an atom or molecule. It does not give off oxygen as a byproduct.
Oxidation is the loss of electrons by a molecule, atom, or ion, while reduction is the gain of electrons by a molecule, atom, or ion. In oxidation-reduction reactions, electrons are transferred from the substance being oxidized to the substance being reduced.
The iron atom doesn't gain or loss "irons". The question does not make sense.
No, an oxygen atom does not have twice the mass of a sulfur atom. An oxygen atom has a mass of approximately 16 atomic mass units (amu), while a sulfur atom has a mass of approximately 32 amu. Therefore, a sulfur atom has twice the mass of an oxygen atom.
The oxygen atom is neutral.
An oxygen atom is a single atom of the element oxygen, while an oxygen molecule is made up of two oxygen atoms bonded together. The molecule is the stable form of oxygen found in the atmosphere that we breathe.
Oxygen is a non metal element. There are 8 electrons in a single atom.
An oxygen atom is an atom with eight protons and eight electrons. An oxygen molecule is a particle that consists of two oxygen atoms that are bonded together.
The radius of an oxygen atom is approximately 0.65 angstroms.
no oxygen is an element of one atom and that's an oxygen atom
an oxygen and a hydrogen atom do not weight the same
Not in and of itself. Ozone is a form, or allotrope, of the element oxygen.