Fluorine is not stable. It has 7 valence electrons, and will therefore partake in chemical reactions.
Fluorine stays as F2 in room temperature. So it is stable.
1
All isotopes of fluorine, whether they are stable or unstable, have atomic number 9.
Potassium will be the the positive ion, and fluorine will be the negative ion because the potassium atom will give one electron to fluorine for they can both be stable. Fluorine will receive one electron from potassium and it will be stable because it has now 8 valence electrons. Giving is positive and receiving is negative. Hope this helps.
neon obeys octet rule (it has 8 electrons in its outer most shell) and is thus stable.
A stable arrangement of electrons in the outer shell is 8, but fluorine has only 7, that is why it is unstable. It needs another electron, desperately. No other element craves electrons as strongly as fluorine does.
Fluorine is a stable element.yes.
fluorine stable fluorine diatomic is unstable
Fluorine is not stable. It has 7 valence electrons, and will therefore partake in chemical reactions.
The stable isotope, Fluorine-19, has 10 neutrons.
one
neon is most stable
To become more stable, fluorine is most likely to gain 1 electron and form F- ion.
Fluorine is a non metal element. Atomic number of it is 9.
Fluorine has 7 valence electrons. In order to become stable, Florine will share 1 electron with another atom to get 8 electron and become stable.
CFC's are stable. They are compounds of carbon, Chlorine and Fluorine.
There are 9 protons and 9 electrons in a fluorine atom The only stable isotope has 10 neutrons
The only stable isotope has 10 neutrons