Indeed.
1
Fluorine has 7 valence electrons and needs 1 more to achieve a stable octet configuration. It is easier for fluorine to gain 1 electron rather than lose 7 to complete its valence shell, making it more favorable for it to gain one electron.
A fluorine atom has 7 valance electrons. This can be identified by looking which group fluorine is located, which is group 7. However when the atoms get bigger this rule does not apply so easily.
Fluorine has 7 valence electrons. This is because it belongs to Group 17 of the periodic table, also known as the halogens, and follows the octet rule, where it needs one more electron to achieve a stable configuration with 8 electrons in its outer shell.
in a normal F- ion there are 10 electrons total (but 8 in the outer energy level)
1
7 valence electrons
Fluorine has 7 valence electrons and needs 1 more to achieve a stable octet configuration. It is easier for fluorine to gain 1 electron rather than lose 7 to complete its valence shell, making it more favorable for it to gain one electron.
7
There are 7 valence electrons in an NF3 molecule. Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons and each fluorine atom contributes 1 valence electron, totaling 3 electrons for the 3 fluorine atoms.
-1
A fluorine atom has 7 valance electrons. This can be identified by looking which group fluorine is located, which is group 7. However when the atoms get bigger this rule does not apply so easily.
Since fluorine and chlorine are in family 7A, they each have 7 valence electrons. The number of the family corresponds to the number of valence electrons.
XeF4 Xe has 8 valance electrons. F has 7 valance electrons * 4 = 28 valance electrons 8 + 28 = 36 valance electron total. Now, there are 4 bonds between Xe and the 4 F's, so that is a total of 8 electrons shared. 36 - 8 = 28 valance electrons left over. That means that 6 each go around the fluorine atoms as three lone pair per atom and one electron for the exon atom, unless this is a charged molecule.
flurine has atomic no. 9 so its electronic configaration is 2,7. Its valance shell has 7 electrons
hundereds
Fluorine has 7 valence electrons. This is because it belongs to Group 17 of the periodic table, also known as the halogens, and follows the octet rule, where it needs one more electron to achieve a stable configuration with 8 electrons in its outer shell.