[Kluged from Wikipedia and others] Hydrogen (H) (Standard atomic mass: 1.00794(7) has three naturally occurring isotopes: Protium 1H, Deuterium 2H, and Tritium 3H. Other, highly unstable nuclei (4H to 7H) have been synthesized in the laboratory but not observed in nature.
it is just an electron (H-) = 1e-
1-
The most chemically reactive ion is the hydrogen ion.
I^- is the most common ion of Iodine.
The most common Selenium ion is Se2- the selenide ion. It is in the same group as oxygen and its most common ion in the oxide ion O2-.
hydrogen can bond with only one other element or ion
the hydrogen ion (H+)
Most likely, hydrogen will form a cation, meaning it will have a positive charge of +1
No, typically hydrogen forms a positive ion.
The most chemically reactive ion is the hydrogen ion.
Ba^2+
Hydrogen usually loses its single electron to become a hydrogen ion, H+.
The ion that is the most chemically reactive ion is known as a hungry wolf in the period table. Hydrogen ion is such a type of ion.
When hydrogen loses one electron from its 1s atomic orbital, then it forms hydrogen ion. Hydrogen ion only take that atom which has only -1 valency .
The ammonium ion forms when an ammonia molecule (NH3) takes a hydrogen ion (H+) either from an acid or from water. The positive charge on the hydrogen ion is taken over into the new ammonium ion.
I^- is the most common ion of Iodine.
All hydrogen atoms have 1 protron in the nuclues and 1 electron outside the nucleus.
The most common Selenium ion is Se2- the selenide ion. It is in the same group as oxygen and its most common ion in the oxide ion O2-.
No, it looses two electron and becomes Ba2+