Yes, all alkali metals do so.
alkali metals (group 1 elements)
The elements in this group are called Alkali Metals.
Elements in the same family (or group) have the same amount of electrons in their outer shell. For Example, all elements in Group 1 have 1 electron in their outer shells.
the alkali metals have 1 electron in their outer most shell. in order to obtain a full outer shell they have to lose this electron. so when they react with another metal they lose this electron and the outer most shell.
Group one metals are the Alkali Metals, but Hydrogen is placed in group one because of its electron arrangement. All group one metals have one electron in their valence shell (outer most shell) and hydrogen is no exception. It has one electron in its last shell, and is therefore placed in group one even though it is not an alkali metal.
One electron in their valence shell (outer most shell)
alkali metals (group 1 elements)
Elements in Sodium's Group (Group 1 - Alkali Metals) will have the same amount of electrons in their outer shell (i.e. 1 electron in the outer shell).
Electron configuration - they have the same number of elements in their outer 'electron shell'. This induces them to have similar bonding properties, and so elements in the same group are chemically similar.
An outer electron shell with only one electron.
The elements in this group are called Alkali Metals.
Elements in the same family (or group) have the same amount of electrons in their outer shell. For Example, all elements in Group 1 have 1 electron in their outer shells.
All of the elements, apart from the transition metals in the middle, are divided into groups. Group 1 elements have 1 electron in their outer shell, and this is the electron used in bonding. Group 2 have 2 electrons, Group 3 elements have 3, and so on. Group 8 elements have a full outer shell, so they generally don't react.
Both statements are true:Every element in group I has one electron in its outer shell andEvery element in group II has two electrons in its outer shell
Elements in group 1 have 1 electron in their outer shell. Group 7 electrons have 7 electrons in their outer shell. This means that the group 1 element needs to give its electron to the group 7 element so that they both have full outer shells, making them stable. By a school boy in yr. 10
That is correct; the first column on the left contains only elements with one electron in their outer shell, also known as "valance electrons". This column is referred to as Group 1, also known as the Alkali Metals.
the alkali metals have 1 electron in their outer most shell. in order to obtain a full outer shell they have to lose this electron. so when they react with another metal they lose this electron and the outer most shell.