Neon is a noble gas and does not form ions.
Na+ and neon are isoelectronic.
Sodium achieves the neon gas onfiguration 1s2 2s2 2p6 and the ion is written as Na+. Sodium can form many stable compounds by ionic bonding.
Ions as Na+, Mg2+, Al3+ and N3- are isoelectronic; neon is an inert gas.
Neon is chemically inert. It normally does not form any ion
Neon is a noble gas and does not form ions.
Neon, if you are talking about an oxygen ion.
Na+ ion and neon are isoelectronic.
Neon does not form ions
Both fluoride ion and sodium ion are isoelectronic with neon. That means all have 10 electrons.
The Fluoride ion, neon atom, and sodium ion all have the same electron configuration and known as ISO-ELECTRONIC ions.
neon does not form any ions.
Neon never becomes an ion because ions are formed to fill the valence shell which in the case of neon is already done in bonding neon dose not become an ion it just has an expanded octetRead more: What_is_a_common_ion_for_neon
what does an atom have in common with an ion?
Neon is isoelectronic with the sodium ion.
Sodium ion (Na+) and neon will have the same number of electrons
Neon has the same electron configuration as Na+ ion