If the ion is the most common anion of fluorine, a fluoride ion, it contains 10 electrons.
Technically yes ... the naming convention is that X ion is the ion you get if you pull electrons off X.However, nothing is electronegative enough to do this to fluorine, so fluorine instead forms fluoride ions by gaining one electron.
Fluoride-19 has 10 electrons (note fluoride is the ion of fluorine, if you meant fluorine, then fluoride has 9 electrons).
Fluoride-19 has 10 electrons (just to mention it, fluoride is the ion of flourine, so if you meant fluorine, fluorine has 9 electrons).
nine
Fluorine's atomic number is 9. Thus, fluorine has 9 protons and 9 electrons. As with every atom, all 9 of fluorine's electrons are found in the electron cloud.
The fluorine isotope differs from the fluorine ion because the fluorine isotope has a different number of neutrons from normal, while the ion has a different number of electrons. An isotope will have the same number of electrons as its atomic number (the number of protons), while the ion will add (more common in the case of fluorine) or subtract (very rare in the case of fluorine) electrons to the atom. The only thing they are similar in is the number of protons they have, which are the same.
Fluorine has atomic number 9, therefore the neutral fluorine atom has 9 electrons. The F-1 ion has 10 electrons.
in a normal F- ion there are 10 electrons total (but 8 in the outer energy level)
A fluorine ion with atomic number 9 and 10 electrons has a charge of -1 because it has one extra electron as compared to the number of protons (10-9 = 1). Its symbol is F-.
F- ion and neon have the same number of electrons.
10
The fluoride atom has 7 electrons in its outer shell (9 in total) but the ion of fluorine has any number of electrons in the outer shell. eg. F+ = the normal fluorine atom but with one less electron.
9
Fluorine has 7 valence shell electrons. If it has a formal charge of (-1) that means that it has 8 non bonding electrons. Its atomic number is 9 therefore the fluorine anion (F-1) has 8 electrons and 9 protons.
There are 9 electrons in the atom without a charge, . The Fluorine ion (F -), has 10 electrons.
Technically yes ... the naming convention is that X ion is the ion you get if you pull electrons off X.However, nothing is electronegative enough to do this to fluorine, so fluorine instead forms fluoride ions by gaining one electron.
Fluorine gains one electron to form a fluoride ion.