NO!!! Fluorine is an elemental gas , with the formula of 'F2'. Structurally (F-F ). However it does form the ion , the fluoride ion , 'F^-'.
Potassium loses 1 electron to form the K+ ion. Fluorine gains one electron to form the F- ion
Fluorine gains one electron to form a fluoride ion.
NO !!!! Fluorine form an ANION , that is an ion eith negative charge. 'F^(-) '.
Fluorine is negative and will produce a negative ion.
NO!!! Fluorine is an elemental gas , with the formula of 'F2'. Structurally (F-F ). However it does form the ion , the fluoride ion , 'F^-'.
Potassium loses 1 electron to form the K+ ion. Fluorine gains one electron to form the F- ion
Fluorine gains one electron to form a fluoride ion.
NO !!!! Fluorine form an ANION , that is an ion eith negative charge. 'F^(-) '.
Fluorine is negative and will produce a negative ion.
Fluorine element is 'F' The fluorine molecule is 'F2'. ( F-F) The fluoride ion is 'F^-' . (NB The fluorine ion is named as 'Fluoride'.
No, The fluoride ion is a reduced form of fluorine.
All the listed elements form ions with a charge of 1, if "1" is taken as the absolute value of the charge on the ion. For fluorine, however, the corresponding ion has a charge of -1.
Not really sure if this is right, but the most-stable ion that fluorine makes is 1 electron more than its usual 7 electron based outer ring... so the usual [He]1s²2s²2p⁵ becomes [He]1s²2s²2p⁶ or something similar to that
Fluorine will gain one electron to form F- (or fluoride) ion. Fluoride ion has a charge of -1.
Jo mama
-1.