The combining power of carbon is 4. This means that each carbon atom can form 4 bonds.
4 electrons
Carbon has 4 valence electrons.
No. Carbon has 4 electrons in its outer shell (valence shell).
There are four valence electrons because it is in 4A row. 5A 5 valence 6A 6 valence etc. Carbon has four.
nitrogen has 5 valence electrons. carbon has 4 valence electrons.
Yes, carbon has 4 valence electrons in its outer shell.
A carbon atom has 4 valence electrons. So, for a C6 molecule, there will be a total of 6 carbon atoms, and each carbon atom will contribute 4 valence electrons, giving a total of 24 valence electrons in the C6 molecule.
All of them. They all have valence electrons, of ns2, np2
carbon has 4 valence electrons
4 valence electrons
The atomic number of carbon is 6. 6 protons, 6 electrons. Two in the first shell and 4 on the second shell leaving 4 spaces open, making the second shell the valence shell and the 4 spaces open the valence- valence is the bonding capacity, in other words the electrons needed to fill the second shell. First shell max is 2 electrons Seccond shell max is 8 electrons
c=4 valence electrons S=6 valence electrons but since its S2 you times 6 by 2=12 12+4=16 16 valence electrons total for CS2