Yes.
nickel's outside electron shell is not full.
I believe it's just the outer shell. It is where the outer electrons are contained.
The decrease in first ionization energy moving from nitrogen to oxygen is due to the increase in atomic size and the addition of an electron in the outer shell of the oxygen atom, making it easier to remove an electron.
Phosphorus has three unpaired electrons spread over its three 3p orbitals. Sulphur (thank you for the old-fashioned British spelling!) has one more electron, so that one must be paired with another in the same 3p orbital. That means it will be repelled slightly, making it easier to remove.
c. Be (beryllium) requires the least energy for the removal of the most loosely bound electron because it has the fewest number of electrons in its outer shell, making it easier to remove the electron.
The electron outside the shell donate its electron to the one inside the shell
In their outer electron shell, halogens have 7 valence electrons, one less than the number needed for a full shell. Therefore, it is much, much easier for the halogen to gain an electron in bonding than for it to lose 7 - the ionization energy (energy required to remove an electron from an atom) is quite high.
In their outer electron shell, halogens have 7 valence electrons, one less than the number needed for a full shell. Therefore, it is much, much easier for the halogen to gain an electron in bonding than for it to lose 7 - the ionization energy (energy required to remove an electron from an atom) is quite high.
In rubidium, having a larger atomic radius, the attraction force between the atomic nucleus and and the electron from outermost shell is lower.
An electron in an atom's outer shell is shielded from the nucleus by inner-shell electrons. These inner-shell electrons repel the outer electron, reducing the net attractive force from the nucleus. This shielding effect helps explain why outer-shell electrons are more loosely bound and easier to remove during chemical reactions.
nickel's outside electron shell is not full.
Ionization energy
I believe it's just the outer shell. It is where the outer electrons are contained.
Phosphorus has a higher energy level so it pulls harder on its electrons.
If you are talking about elements, they are electrons.
Nitrogen monoxide (NO) has a higher ionization energy compared to nitrogen gas (N2) because NO has one fewer electron in its outer shell, making it easier to remove that electron.
The overall of an atom is a nucleus (protons and neutrons), and 1 or 2 electrons. The rest are for large atoms: an electron shell, electrons, an electron shell, electrons, an electron shell, electrons, an electron shell, electrons, an electron shell, electrons, an electron shell, electrons, an electron shell, electrons.