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Oxygen, nitrogen, and chlorine do not chemically combine to form a specific compound. Each element retains its individual properties when they are mixed together.
Nitrogen has 7 electrons, oxygen has 8 electrons, and chlorine has 9 electrons. That is the total electron count, for inner and outer shells. If you are only concerned with the valance electrons, then it is 5 for nitrogen, 6 for oxygen, and 7 for chlorine.
Iodine, bromine, chlorine, sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen
Oxygen, nitrogen, flourine, chlorine, bromine.
FONCl (pronounced fonkle) - the order of electronegativity - F O N Cl - fluorine, oxygen, nitrogen, chlorine
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Oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, chlorine, fluorine have diatomic molecules.
hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and chlorine are all gases at STP
It is Nitrogen, Sulfur, Oxygen, and Chlorine
The chemical reaction is:AgNO3 + NaCl= AgCl + NaNO3The mass of products depends on the mass of reactants.
Metal elements tend to bond to atoms that are lacking a full outer electron ring such as Oxygen and Chlorine.
No. Carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen are separate elements.