Platinum forms ionic bonds.
in an ionic bond the electrons are gaining or receiving electrons. in a covalent bond 2 atoms are sharing electrons
You can't you would need a new Action Replay.
By bonding with another atom, either ionically (donates/receives electrons) or covalently (electron sharing).
In covalent compounds, atoms become chemically stable by sharing electrons with each other to fill their outermost energy levels. By sharing electrons, atoms can achieve a full outer electron shell, which is typically 8 electrons for most elements (except for hydrogen and helium which need 2 electrons).
I believe they would be sharing electrons in the outer orbit.
I believe they would be sharing electrons in the outer orbit.
To add formal charges to each resonance form of NCO, you need to calculate the formal charge for each atom in the molecule. The formal charge is determined by subtracting the number of lone pair electrons and half the number of bonding electrons from the total number of valence electrons for each atom. By doing this calculation for each resonance form of NCO, you can determine the formal charges for each atom in the molecule.
i have no idea what he enjoyed doing but i think it was his wonderful job working with electrons
If it happens when you are alone, it is probably meaningless and can be dismissed. If it happens in the presence of that certain someone it means you are special. Keep doing what you're doing!
While electrons are transferred from one element to another in ionic bonds, valence electrons are shared in covalent bonds. The ultimate "goal" of elements in bonding is to complete their outer shell, that is, end up with 8 valence electrons. Elements in ionic bonds accomplish this by giving away or taking electrons until their outer shell is complete; elements in covalent bonds share electrons so that the electrons completing the outer shell of one element are also completing the outer shell of the other. For example, in the case of O2, both oxygen atoms are looking to complete their outer shells, and both have 6 valence electrons, creating a total of 12 valence electrons. When they bond, they share two pairs of electrons, giving 4 electrons that are shared between the two, and 4 electrons per atom that are not shared. This creates a double bond between the two oxygen atoms (because two pairs of electrons are being shared) and means that while each atom has 8 electrons in its outer shell, because 4 of them are shared, there are still only 12 valence electrons overall. Thus in covalent bonds electrons are shared between two atoms to complete both outer shells at once.
Try doing stuff that you and your parents like. Then talk to each other about your problems.
Their pooping.