10 I totally know it is right.
Yes sulfur does have more electron shells than oxygen.
Both oxygen and sulfur have the same number of electron shells, which is two.
The electron configuration of oxygen (atomic number 8) is 1s2 2s2 2p4The noble gas form is [He] 2s22p41s2 2s2 2p4
False, a Hydrogen has 1 electron and Oxygen has 8 electrons
No, the ionization energies of oxygen and xenon are not the same. Xenon has higher ionization energy compared to oxygen due to the increased number of electrons and stronger electron-electron repulsion in xenon.
An Oxygen atom consists of eight electrons. The total number of protons will always match the number of electron.
oxygen
The formula to calculate the effective nuclear charge on a valence electron in an oxygen atom is Zeff Z - S, where Z is the atomic number of the element (in this case, oxygen with an atomic number of 8) and S is the shielding constant.
Oxygen is an electron withdrawing element.
The effective nuclear charge (Z_eff) experienced by a valence electron in an oxygen atom can be calculated by considering the number of protons in the nucleus minus the number of core electrons shielding the valence electron. For oxygen with 8 protons and 2 core electrons in the 1s orbital, the Z_eff for a valence electron in the 2s or 2p orbital would be approximately 6 (Z_eff = 8 - 2).
The electron configuration for oxygen is [He]2s2.2p4.The electron configuration for sulfur is [Ne]3s2.3p4.
In the electron transport chain Oxygen is the final electron acceptor. Also the Oxygen accepts 2 Hydrogen ions, making water in the process. The dissapearance of Oxygen shows that the electron transport chain is working and that Oxygen is doing its job.