No, oxygen, as a nonmetal element, cannot have an expanded octet in its valence shell.
There is no non-metal with one valence electron. Every element with 1 valence electron belongs to the alkali metals family
The element you are describing is oxygen. It has 6 valence electrons and 2 energy levels, placing it in group 16 of the periodic table as a nonmetal.
Handles on screwdrivers should be non metal.
E. It is metal. Calcium has 2 valence electrons and is classified as a metal. It is also reactive, especially with water and oxygen.
Oxygen is the element that has 8 valence electrons and is in the gaseous state at room temperature.
There is no non-metal with one valence electron. Every element with 1 valence electron belongs to the alkali metals family
The element you are describing is oxygen. It has 6 valence electrons and 2 energy levels, placing it in group 16 of the periodic table as a nonmetal.
part of the oxygen group....gas, nonmetal...
Sulfur, which is in the oxygen family, has 6 valence electrons.
Yes, of course. It is an element found in the right side of the periodic table of elements. You can tell the level of an element being non-metallic by following the flow of left-to-right and bottom-to-top.
Oxygen is nonmetal because since oxygen isn't visable it's not solid so oxygen is nonmetal.
There are 20 valence electrons in the expanded valence structure of sulfur dioxide. This includes the electrons from the sulfur atom (6 valence electrons) and each oxygen atom (6 valence electrons each).
Yes, carbon dioxide is a compound composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms. Carbon is considered a nonmetal element, while oxygen is also a nonmetal element.
Handles on screwdrivers should be non metal.
E. It is metal. Calcium has 2 valence electrons and is classified as a metal. It is also reactive, especially with water and oxygen.
Oxygen is the element that has 8 valence electrons and is in the gaseous state at room temperature.
there is no such element