There are several - the most notable being H+, H-, and Li+.
You're going to need to give some answer choices here. There is quite an array of elements that do not necessarily have to follow the octet rule, Xenon being just one example.
no it does not follow octet rule
No chlorine oxides will obey the octet rule.
Chlorine Cl : it can have a higher valence (ClO2, HClO3) than predicted by the octet rule. Hydrogen H and oxygen O cannot escape the octet rule.
octet rule
It is one of many, many exceptions to the octet rule. Hydrogen does NOT require 8 electrons.
It does follow the octet rule!
Az important rule: any octet has to have eight parts, otherwise it is not an octet.
No, CH4 follows the octet rule.
Boron is one. It exceeds the octet rule.
no it does not follow octet rule
No chlorine oxides will obey the octet rule.
The octet rule.
The octet rule does not apply to transition metals.
The octet rule is the tendency of many chemical elements to have eight electrons in the valence shell.
Chlorine Cl : it can have a higher valence (ClO2, HClO3) than predicted by the octet rule. Hydrogen H and oxygen O cannot escape the octet rule.
yes PCl3 obey octet rule there are 5 electrons in the valence shell of phosphorous it need 3 electron to complete its octet so it form bond with 3 chlorine after bond formation there are 8 electron in its octet it obey octet rule
octet rule