When you say Ion you have to specify whether its negative or positive and the number associated with it. For example: if its Li 3- it means it has 3 more electrons then regular Lithium (which has 3 electrons) that makes it 6 electrons and 3 protons (this nr doesnt change) for Li 3-. Obviously calculations vary depending on the type of ion.
Lithium ion is Li^1+ and the number of protons is 3 and the number of electrons is 2.
In an ion your protons do not change it will always stay the same. So in this case Lithium would hae three protons
There are less electrons than protons in a positive ion. More information is needed to determine the exact number. Here is an example: How many electrons are in a carbon ion with a positive charge of positive 2e? There are 6 protons in carbon (since it is element number 6). Since it has a charge of +2, there will be 2 less electrons than protons, so the number of electrons would be 4.
A positive ion.
The number of protons of an element does not change when it undergoes a chemical change. It is the number of electrons that changes. Sulfur has 16 protons, and so does the sulfide ion. However, sulfur has 16 electrons, while the sulfide ion (S2-) has 18 electrons.
An Ion. An ion can have an overall positive or negative charge. The negative charge of an electron exactly cancels the positive charge of a proton, so when an atom has an equal number of both, it carries zero charge. An ion with more protons than electrons has a positive charge, and is more specifically termed a cation. An ion that has more electrons than protons, and therefore a negative overall charge, is called an anion.
3 protons and 2 electrons.
Lithium ion is Li^1+ and the number of protons is 3 and the number of electrons is 2.
Lithium loses one electron when fulfilling the octet rule. A neutral atom of lithium will have the same number of electrons as protons, 3. Therefore, a lithium ion will have one less electron, 2.
A lithium ion has three protons and 2 electrons - Li+. A neutral lithium atom has 3 electrons, but loses one to form an ionic bond with a non-metal.
All lithium atoms and ions have three protons. The lithium ion has a charge of +1, meaning there is one less electron than protons, two.
There are 3 protons and 2 electrons present in a lithium ion.
Lithium has three protons and three electrons. The number of electrons always equals the number of protons. Lithium has two isotopes, one with three neutrons and one with four neutrons.
The lithium ion is essentially the same as the lithium atom, except it has lost 1 electrons. The number of protons and neutrons remain the same. Thus, the lithium ion, Li+ has 3 neutrons, just like the lithium atom.
A neutral lithium atom has 3 electrons, the same as the number of protons, which is the atomic number of lithium. There is no lithium ion with a charge of 7+. If you mean lithium with a mass number of 7, the number of protons is 3 and the number of neutrons is 4.
Lithium has 3 protons and 3 electrons.
There are 8 protons and 10 electrons in an oxide ion.
3