Fluorine is a non meta element. Atomic number of it is 9.
Fluoride itself is not an element. It is the ion formed by the element fluorine. The atomic number of fluorine is 9.
Yes, elements can be ordered by their atomic number. The atomic number of an element corresponds to the number of protons in an atom's nucleus, and elements are arranged in the periodic table from lowest to highest atomic number.
No it does not have. Atomic number i for elements.
Flourine (atomic number 9) has 9 protons and 9 electrons and 10 neutrons. Of course if it were a trick question than all elements with an atomic number of 9 or greater would hae 9 electrons :)
Elements' atomic numbers are based on the number of protons an atom of that element contains. Fluorine atoms contain 9 protons. Therefore, fluorine is the element with the atomic number 9. Fluorine is also a compound because it has 9 protons.
Th elements that form stable* diatomic molecules at standard temperature and pressure are: Atomic number 1: H Atomic number 7: N Atomic number 8: O Atomic number 9: F Atomic number 17: Cl Atomic number 35: Br Atomic number 53: I _____________________________________________________ *Atomic number 85, At, would be expected chemically to form diatomic molecules, but all its isotopes are radioactively unstable.
the atomic number for fluorine is 9
The atomic number of fluorine is 9.
protons dont have an atomic number as they are not elements
all element have an atomic number.
No two elements may have the same atomic number. But two elements may have same atomic mass. Hence atomic number is better than atomic mass.
Nitrogen has the smallest atomic number among the elements listed. Aluminum has an atomic number of 13, Potassium has an atomic number of 19, and Nitrogen has an atomic number of 7.