Hydrogen normally doesn't but its isotopes deuterium and tritium do.
hydrogen
neutrons are neutral they have 0 charge
Neutrons have a 0 (zero) charge
No it is the same chemical element with a different number of neutrons, but the same chemical properties.
The number of neutrons differ for each isotope of a chemical element.
it is acid and neutrons
Electrons do but neutrons do not
Neutrons are not involved in chemical reactions.
Each neutron has an (electrical) charge of zero. For two neutrons, 0 + 0 = 0.
The chemical symbol for fluorine isotope with 9 neutrons is 18F (18 is a superscript).
neutrons are neutral they have 0 charge
Hydrogen has 0 neutrons
Neutrons have a 0 (zero) charge
There are 44 neutrons in 79Br and 46 neutrons in 81Br (the stable isotopes). Br is the chemical symbol of bromine.
No it is the same chemical element with a different number of neutrons, but the same chemical properties.
The number of neutrons differ for each isotope of a chemical element.
it is acid and neutrons
All chemical elements (excepting the isotope 1H) contain neutrons.