No.
Lithium has the atomic number of 3, which means it has 3 protons, and a neutral atom of lithium has 3 electrons.
The element below sodium with atomic number 11 is lithium. Lithium is a metal in the same alkali metal family as sodium.
All lithium atoms will have the same number of protons (3) but can have different numbers of neutrons, resulting in different isotopes of lithium. Electrons are the same for a neutral lithium atom (3 electrons), but ions of lithium can have a different number of electrons.
A neutral lithium atom has 3 electrons, the same as the number of protons, which is the atomic number of lithium. There is no lithium ion with a charge of 7+. If you mean lithium with a mass number of 7, the number of protons is 3 and the number of neutrons is 4.
Atoms of the same element usually have the same number of protons but differ slightly in the number of neutrons. The number of neutrons are usually about the number of protons so it can be estimated as so. For example, there are two relatively common isotopes of sodium: sodium 22 and sodium 23, where the number is the total number of protons and neutrons. Sodium 22 has 11 neutrons and sodium 23 has 12 neutrons but the sodium atom has 11 protons. For further information, look up isotopes.
All the lithium atoms contain the same number of protons.
Lithium has three protons because elements always have the same number of protons.
Yes, the number of protons in an atom and its ion of lithium is the same. Lithium always has 3 protons in its nucleus, regardless of whether it is in its neutral atom form (Li) or as an ion with a different number of electrons.
Lithium has the atomic number of 3, which means it has 3 protons, and a neutral atom of lithium has 3 electrons.
find lithium on the periodic table. whatever its atomic number is, that's how many protons it has. a substance never changes the number of protons it has. so lithium will always have the same number of protons, regardless of the number of electrons or neutrons it has (otherwise it wouldn't be lithium).
In an ion your protons do not change it will always stay the same. So in this case Lithium would hae three protons
The element below sodium with atomic number 11 is lithium. Lithium is a metal in the same alkali metal family as sodium.
All lithium atoms will have the same number of protons (3) but can have different numbers of neutrons, resulting in different isotopes of lithium. Electrons are the same for a neutral lithium atom (3 electrons), but ions of lithium can have a different number of electrons.
No. Lithium is an element with atomic number 3 (or 3 protons) and neon is an element with atomic number 10 (or 10 protons). Both are not same.
Lithium has 3 protons. The atomic number and the number of protons will be the same.
Sodium has 11 protons because the number of protons is the same as the atomic number.
A neutral lithium atom has 3 electrons, the same as the number of protons, which is the atomic number of lithium. There is no lithium ion with a charge of 7+. If you mean lithium with a mass number of 7, the number of protons is 3 and the number of neutrons is 4.