It's in the outermost shell of the electron.
Use the figure 2n2 where n = the shell number. There are many levels of shells, so "inner" is not a very specific term. If you mean "inner-most" shell however, then the answer would be two, since n = 1.
I think it's the valence shell
yes
Those electrons are the valence electrons. They are the electrons which mostly take part in exchange of electrons or sharing of electrons. Hence, valence shell electrons are a very important part of chemistry since all the reactions due to them only.
inner shell electrons : the electrons that are not in the the highest occupied energy level .
inner-shell electrons
there are 2 electrons in the inner shell of a hydrogen atom.
The very inner shell of an atom is the 1st shell and can only contain 2 electrons.
2, there is always 2 in the inner shell.
Valence electrons are the electrons in the outermost shell of an atom. The ones in the inner shell are known as core electrons.
Yes, Lithium has the Atomic Number 3, therefore has 3 electrons. The inner 'shell' of electrons only needs 2 electrons to be full. The Li+ ion also has a full inner shell.
Valence electrons are the electrons in the outermost shell of an atom. The ones in the inner shell are known as core electrons.
Boron has 3 electrons in the outer shell and 2 electrons in the inner.
The inner most shell is the K shell with 2 electrons whereas the outer shell or the L shell has 5 electrons
Yes, it is true. Until the inner shell is fully filled-electrons do not enter the next shell.
2