Electron. In a stable element the number of protons (+ charged subatomic particles) must match the number of electrons (- charged subatomic particles) and neutrons (neutral or uncharged subatomic particles). At least that's how I remember it from my school days.
Yes, when a base gains a proton, it forms its conjugate acid by accepting the proton. The conjugate acid of a base is the species that results after the base gains a proton.
The charge of an ion formed by an element on the periodic table is determined by the number of electrons gained or lost by the element. This charge can be positive or negative, depending on whether the element loses or gains electrons.
The acid formed when a base gains a proton is called a conjugate acid of the base. This process is known as protonation, where the base accepts a proton to become an acid. The conjugate acid will have one more proton than the base.
The row that shows the change that takes place when element X gains a new particle is the row that represents the atomic number increasing by 1 and the mass number remaining the same.
No, H3O+ is not a free radical. It is a hydronium ion formed when a water molecule gains a proton. It has a positive charge due to the addition of the extra proton.
Fluorine
When a gold nucleus gains a proton, it becomes a mercury nucleus. This occurs through the process of beta-plus decay, where a proton transforms into a neutron, resulting in a change in atomic number from 79 (gold) to 80 (mercury).
an ion is when an element loses or gains one or more electrons. an isotope is when a element loses or gains one or more neutrons. when one or more proton(s) is/are gained or lost, it becomes a different element.
Yes, when a base gains a proton, it forms its conjugate acid by accepting the proton. The conjugate acid of a base is the species that results after the base gains a proton.
The charge of an ion formed by an element on the periodic table is determined by the number of electrons gained or lost by the element. This charge can be positive or negative, depending on whether the element loses or gains electrons.
When an atom gains a positive charge, it loses one or more electrons. This alters its charge but not its identity as an element. The number of protons, which defines the element, remains the same in a positively charged atom.
The acid formed when a base gains a proton is called a conjugate acid of the base. This process is known as protonation, where the base accepts a proton to become an acid. The conjugate acid will have one more proton than the base.
It would be the ion fluoride, formed when a fluorine atom gains an electron. None of the elements on the periodic table are charged in their elemental state.
Presuming that you mean from the left and right of the periodic table, you are likely to get an ionic compound as the left hand (metal) element loses electrons and the right hand (non metal) element gains them.
it loses a proton or gains an electron
The row that shows the change that takes place when element X gains a new particle is the row that represents the atomic number increasing by 1 and the mass number remaining the same.
Electrons. ( plus that proton )