There's only one neutral element with 46 electrons. It's the same element that has 46 protons. This element is palladium.
No, it is illeagal...
146 pounds = 10st 6lb
one hundred an d three thousand nine hundred and fourtysix
How many valence electrons do transition elements have?
When these elements have five electrons on the outermost shell of electrons.
Elements in the same group have the same number of valence electrons.
Group 2 metals have 2 valence electrons. In fact, the number of valence electrons of elements can be deduced from the group number (e.g. group VII elements have 7 valence electrons).
Elements in the same group have the same number of valence electrons. These are the outer-shell electrons that react with other elements.
Group 7A elements have 7 electrons in their valence level, while Group 7B elements have 17 electrons in their valence level. This difference occurs because elements in Group 7A have 7 valence electrons, while elements in Group 7B have 7 valence electrons plus the 10 additional electrons in the d sublevel which contributes to a total of 17 valence electrons.
Elements react with other elements based on the number of electrons in their outer shell, also known as valence electrons. Elements are most stable when their outer shell is full, so they will either gain, lose, or share electrons in order to achieve a full outer shell.
Halogen family members, or elements in group 17, have 7 valence electrons.
Copper, Cu, has 29 electrons.