An example is silicon.
Elements in Group 14 (Carbon family) contain four valence electrons. These elements include carbon, silicon, germanium, tin, and lead.
4 electrons
Elements that contain four valence electrons include elements from group 14 of the periodic table, such as carbon (C), silicon (Si), germanium (Ge), tin (Sn), and lead (Pb). These elements have their outermost electron shell filled with four electrons and display a variety of chemical properties based on this electron configuration.
All of the members of the carbon family have 4 valence electrons.
The family of elements that has 4 valence electrons is the carbon family, which includes carbon (C), silicon (Si), germanium (Ge), tin (Sn), and lead (Pb). These elements are located in Group 14 of the periodic table.
it has 4 valence electrons
nitrogen has 5 valence electrons. carbon has 4 valence electrons.
The atomic number of carbon is 6. 6 protons, 6 electrons. Two in the first shell and 4 on the second shell leaving 4 spaces open, making the second shell the valence shell and the 4 spaces open the valence- valence is the bonding capacity, in other words the electrons needed to fill the second shell. First shell max is 2 electrons Seccond shell max is 8 electrons
It is silicon that has the same number of valence electrons as carbon. Silicon sits right below carbon on the periodic table.
Neutral Carbon atoms contain 6 electrons and 6 protons 2 electrons are found in the 1st electron ring and 4 in the outer ring to reach a stable electron (8 in the outershell) arrangement carbon requires 4 covalent bonds to be formed
No. Carbon has 4 electrons in its outer shell (valence shell).
Carbon has four valence electrons. Each of theseelectrons can pair with an electron from another atom to form a strong covalent bond. In carbon, all the electrons with the principal quantum number 2 are valence electrons, but the two electrons with principal quantum number 1 are not.