Sulfur
The neutral state.
Sulfur can form the sulfide ion (S2-) and the disulfide ion (S22-) on its own. When combined with oxygen it can form the sulfate ion (SO42-) and sulfite ion (SO32-).
A sulfide ion is an ion of just the sulfur atom on its own, whereas a sulfate ion is an ion that is composed of sulfur and oxygen, typically SO42-.
F- and thus 1s22s22p6
-2
Sulfur
Iron II sulfide, FeS
The most common ion formed from a single sulfur atom is a sulfide ion, with a charge of -2.
yes sulfur is positive ion
The most common mono-atomic sulfur ion is its anion with valence 2 and charge -2.
No, sulfur has only 6 valence electrons. Atoms with 8 valence electrons are most stable and generally chemically inert.
-2 is the most common charge (sulphide ion).
the common isotopes is 16
16 protons, and if it isn't an ion ("isn't an ion" means that it has no electric charge), it has 16 electrons. on average, sulfur has 16.065 neutrons, but that's averaged out, so it's a weird number. let's just say most sulfur has 16 neutrons.
The phosphide ion is stable
The neutral state.