No. Phosphorus is solid at room temperature and is highly reactive.
No, 3s2p3 is not the noble gas distribution for phosphorus. Phosphorus has an electron configuration of 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p3, which is not a noble gas distribution. Noble gas distribution for phosphorus would be [Ne] 3s2 3p3.
The noble gas electron configuration of Phosphorus is [Ne] 3s2 3p3
For phosphorus [Ne]3s23p3
Yes, Ne 3s2p3 represents the electron configuration of phosphorus, not a noble gas distribution. Phosphorus has 15 electrons, with the electron configuration [Ne] 3s2 3p3, indicating that it has the noble gas core of neon with additional electrons in the 3s and 3p orbitals.
[Ne] 3s2 3p3
[Ne] 3s2 3p3
The noble gas nearest to Phosphorus (P) is Argon (Ar).
When phosphorus achieves a noble gas configuration, it gains three electrons to become the phosphide ion (P³⁻). This allows it to achieve the stable electron configuration of a noble gas, similar to argon.
No phosphorus is a group 15, (group Vb) element
PD (Palladium) element 46 has an electron configuration281818
Yes it will as P-3 ion will have the same electron configuration of the noble gas, argon.
Phosphorus has to gain a total of 3 electrons to achieve a noble gas configuration. You can find this for any non-metal because the last digit of its group number is the number of valence electrons it has. For example Phosphorus has 5 and Sulfur has 6. In order to achieve a noble gas electron configuration, you must have 8 valence electrons, so phosphorus must gain 3.