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An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.
No. the statement is false.Number of positively charged protons always equals number of negatively charged electrons in a neutral atom
Elements are neutral as their number of electrons equals the number of protons. If an atom has lost one of it's electrons it becomes a positively charged ion or an cation, if it gains an electron it's a negatively charged ion or an anion. Generally if an atom is on the right hand side of the periodic table it gains electrons to become negatively charged and fulfil it's valiance shell. If it's on the left hand side of the periodic table it tends to loose electrons and become positively charged. The amount of charge on each ion depends on the what the atoms are bonded to. Example, NaCl (Table Salt) is actually Na+ Cl-
Atoms that are neutral must have equal numbers of protons and electrons. This is because protons have a positive charge and electrons have a negative charge. Thus, for the charge to be neutral, the numbers of these particles must be equal.
A proton has a positive charge.
A neutron. There are several neutral particles, but the neutron is the most well-known.A neutron. There are several neutral particles, but the neutron is the most well-known.A neutron. There are several neutral particles, but the neutron is the most well-known.A neutron. There are several neutral particles, but the neutron is the most well-known.
An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.An atom can be negatively charged if it has an extra electron.
divide 0.108 gm by 1 coulomb of charge because e.c.e equals mass in gm/charge
Atoms are always without charge because this is the 'ground' state of any atomic element. The number of electrons equals the number of protons, so there is NO net charge. When electrons are gained (eg. by Cl2) or donated (eg. by Na) the compound can be formed by the newly formed ions (Cl- and Na+ will combine to NaCl)
the point would be the kolwea-4 where the positive charge is q3. xoxoxo
No. the statement is false.Number of positively charged protons always equals number of negatively charged electrons in a neutral atom
The electrons posses negative (-) charge and the protons positive (+). - and + equals 0 and 0 means neutral.So, if the electrons are more than the protons the charge would be negative because the electrons are negatively charged.If the protons are more than the charge would be positive because the protons are positively charged.
An ionic compound, made up of cations and anions in an ionic lattice arrangement. Could also be a polar-covalent bond A molecule that has both a positive charge and negative charge is called a Zwitterion. A good example is an amino acid that has both an amino group and a carboxylic acid. In solution, the amino group will be positively charged and the carboxylic acid will be negatively charged for a net charge of zero.
neutral
Any number plus zero equals the original number. Any number times one equals the original number.
No.
The Ionic charge of H2O is 0 because H has a +1 charge and there are two H so it equals +2 and O has a -2 charge. So they balance out to a charge of zero