oxygen and carbon
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Oxygen will have the greatest attraction for sulfur electrons when combined because oxygen has a higher electronegativity value than sulfur. This means that oxygen has a stronger ability to attract and hold onto shared electrons in a chemical bond.
Hydrosulfuric acid (H2S) is a polar covalent molecule because of the electronegativity difference between hydrogen and sulfur atoms. The sulfur atom attracts electrons more strongly, leading to an uneven distribution of charge within the molecule.
In an S-F bond, the electrons are shared between the sulfur and fluorine atoms, forming a covalent bond. Fluorine, being more electronegative than sulfur, attracts the shared electrons more strongly, leading to a polar bond. This results in a partial negative charge on the fluorine atom and a partial positive charge on the sulfur atom. Therefore, the S-F bond exhibits characteristics of both covalent bonding and polarity due to the difference in electronegativity.
Sulfur has 10 core electrons. Because the core electrons = all electrons that aren't valence electrons. Sulfur has 16 electrons; 6 valence and 10 core.
A neutral atom of sulfur has 16 electrons.
'S' look for it on the periodic table for full name.
There are 6 valence electrons in the sulfur atom.
All the isotopes of sulfur has 16 electrons.
Sulfur has 6 valence electrons.
A sulfur atom becomes a sulfur ion by losing or gaining electrons. If a sulfur atom loses electrons, it becomes a positively charged sulfur ion (sulfur cation). If it gains electrons, it becomes a negatively charged sulfur ion (sulfur anion).
Sulfur has 6 electrons in the valence shell.
6 electrons and 16 protons.