list all the orbitals that hydrogen electrons can occupy as it fall.
1
In any orbital the maximum number of electrons is 2 of opposite spin. The following is a list of the different types of orbitals and the maximum nuber of electrons each type can contain. s-orbitals: one orbital, containing 2 electrons p-orbitals: three (px, py, pz) containing 6 in total d-orbitals: five, containing 10 f-orbitals: seven containing 14
The second energy level (orbit) can hold 8 electrons.
hydrogenhydrogen------------------------------------------------------Put the following elements in order, with the element having the most valence electrons at the top of your list and the element with the fewest valence electrons at the bottom.NEONCHLORINESULFURNITROGENSILICONBORONCALCIUMSODIUM
I'm the biggest boss in town guess UBA heheh
helium is a noble gas, so it is stable and does not need to bond with anything. i think there are 7 diatomics, hydrogen and some halogens?? not positive on that. its just a short list that you pretty much have to memorize though.
Polar Molecules:· Water (H20): it is planar triangular, and the electrons orbit more around the O than the 2 H's· Nitrogen Hydroxide (NH3): Planar triangular, electrons orbit more around the N that the Hydrogen· Sulfur Dioxide (SO2): Planar triangular, electrons orbit more around Sulfur than the oxygen.· Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S): Planar triangular, electrons orbit more around Hydrogen than sulfur.· Bromine Trichloride (BCl3): planar triangular, electrons orbit more around Bromine.Non Polar Molecules:· Dihydrogen (H2): Linear and electrons orbit evenly · Carbon Dioxide (CO2): Linear, equal orbit· Carbon Monoxide (CO): linear, equal distribution·
AsianPride , OneBall, PHTeam, DarkScience, PhilCarder, Anonymous Philippines (#Occupy Philippines)
Water salt
The list of answers were not provided. Hydrogen cyanide is the only one on that list that is not commonly produced by double replacement reactions and away.
Hydrogen and oxygen; hydrogen and fluorine; sodium and fluorine; and benzene and oxygen.
In the list we have potassium chloride, an ionic compound where electrons are transferred to form ions; silver metal which has delocalised electrons that give rise to electrical conductivity; hydrogen fluoride a covalent molecule where an electron pair is shared; chlorine gas which a covalent molecule with a shared air. The least delocalised is the ionic compound. The most is the metal.
If hydrogen is on the list, it automatically wins.