K+
When potassium achieves a noble gas electron configuration, it loses one electron to form the K+ ion. The K+ ion has a stable electron configuration similar to that of argon, with 18 electrons.
The noble gas configuration for potassium is [Ar] 4s^1. To form a cation, potassium would lose its one valence electron, resulting in a 1+ ion. Therefore, the ion formed when potassium achieves a noble gas electron configuration is K^+.
Na+ is the formula of the ion formed when sodium achieves a stable electron configuration.
The ion formed when potassium achieves noble-gas electron configuration is K+ (potassium ion). This occurs when potassium loses one electron to have a full outer electron shell, similar to the nearest noble gas, argon.
The calcium ion formed when it achieves a noble-gas electron configuration is Ca2+, as it loses two electrons to have the same electron configuration as argon, a noble gas.
P3-
Sodium looses one electron to achieve noble gas electronic configuration.The formula of ion formed is Na+
s2,s2 p6.s1
Sulfur atoms will gain two electrons in order to achieve a noble gas electron configuration. A sulfide ion has the formula S2-.
P-3 ion is formed with 18 electrons.
The ion formed when sodium achieves a noble-gas electronic configuration is Na+. This means that sodium has lost one electron to achieve the same electron configuration as neon, a noble gas, which has a stable electron configuration.
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.