O'''''''
[He] 2s2 2p4
The electron configuration notation for oxygen is 1s2 2s2 2p4. This indicates that oxygen has 8 electrons, with 2 in the 1s orbital, 2 in the 2s orbital, and 4 in the 2p orbital.
The orbital notation for oxygen is 1s^2 2s^2 2p^4. This indicates that oxygen has two electrons in the 1s orbital, two electrons in the 2s orbital, and four electrons in the 2p orbital.
[He] 2s2 2p6 for O2-
The notation for a hydroxide ion is OH-. It consists of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom bonded together with a single covalent bond. The negative charge is due to the extra electron that the oxygen atom brings to the ion.
In the molecule notation "O₂," the little "2" indicates that there are two atoms of oxygen bonded together to form a diatomic molecule. This means that each molecule of oxygen consists of two oxygen atoms, which is the most common form of oxygen found in the Earth's atmosphere. The notation helps to distinguish between a single oxygen atom (O) and the molecular form (O₂) that we breathe.
im not quite sure what you mean but if you mean like the abbreviation eg: Oxygen=O Nickel=Ni
It's Oxygen but in gas form. Such as N2 is nitrogen gas. But just N is nitrogen.
Most oxygen molecules contain two atoms, which we breath O2. If we breath pure oxygen (one atom) our lungs would burn. Three molecules of oxygen is the ozone which is unstable and converts back to O2.
In Word 2010, to type Carbon dioxide in scientific notation, you can write it as "CO2." To represent this in scientific notation, you can write it as "2.0 x 10^1," where 10^1 represents the two oxygen atoms in CO2.
At standard temperature and pressure it is approx 1.3*10-3 grams per mL.
The electron dot notion for oxygen is given by 6 dots indicating 6 electrons in the outer shell. Oxygen has 8 electrons, 2 present in the K shell and 6 in the L shell ready for accepting electrons.