the Xenon itself is an electron, so it doesn't have an ion charge
It will be weakly polar as a neutral compound, due to the presence of 1 unshared pair of electrons around the central xenon atom. (Additionally, the relatively large number of electrons in this compound will yield temporary dipoles in the form of dispersion forces.) If it's an ion, then I would need to know its charge. If its charge is +2 (meaning it has lost 2 electrons,) then that ion would be non-polar.
No. Xenon does not form ions.
No, it is a neutral element.
An ion does have a charge. That is what makes it an ion.
The neutral state.
Xenon does not readily form an ion.
It will be weakly polar as a neutral compound, due to the presence of 1 unshared pair of electrons around the central xenon atom. (Additionally, the relatively large number of electrons in this compound will yield temporary dipoles in the form of dispersion forces.) If it's an ion, then I would need to know its charge. If its charge is +2 (meaning it has lost 2 electrons,) then that ion would be non-polar.
No. Xenon does not form ions.
No, it is a neutral element.
I- ion (iodine ion and not iodine) and xenon will have the same number of electrons (54 electrons)
An ion does have a charge. That is what makes it an ion.
Iodide is monovalent anion. It is I+The charge of the iodide ion is 1-
The neutral state.
This is the electrical charge of the ion.
false
None.
1.what is the oxidation state in xenon in HXeO4- and ... xenon is +7. As= +3 ... Xe = +7. As = +3 ... Except when highly electropositive elements are involved