Typically, neither. It has 11 protons and 11 electrons. It has only one electron in its valence (outer) shell however, which makes it highly reactive.
You have heard of Wikipedia, surely.
Salt is a neutral compound composed of positively charged sodium ions (Na+) and negatively charged chloride ions (Cl-). The overall charge of salt is neutral because the numbers of positive and negative charges are balanced.
No, electrons are negitive. Protons are positive. Newtrans are newtral.
When an atom loses an electron and becomes negatively charged we refer to it as a positive ion
No they are negatively charged, nuetrons are nuetral, protons are positive, not all atoms have nuetrons
Electrons are negatively charged. Each atom has at leastone electron, depending upon which element it is. Furthermore, protons are positively charged and determine the identity of the element. Neutrons are neutrally charged.
A negative charge attracts a positive charge and repels a negative charge. OPPOSITES ATTRACT ;)
Positive ion. Examples: H+ Na+ Li+ Be+ N+ Lost multiple electrons? H2+ Na2+ Li3+ H5+
no, it is negatively charged
No, they are negatively charged.
Salt is a neutral compound composed of positively charged sodium ions (Na+) and negatively charged chloride ions (Cl-). The overall charge of salt is neutral because the numbers of positive and negative charges are balanced.
Na+ & Cl-
You can have positive ions and negative ions. For example, take saltwater which dissociates into: Na+ & Cl- Typically the number positive charges and negative charges must balance.
positive protons
Nitrogen is negatively charged.
Negatively charged polysaccharides
Electrons are negatively charged.
It should normally be neutral, that is, it should not have a significant charge, positive or negative.