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When a material gains electrons, it becomes negatively charged. This is because it now has more negatively charged electrons than positively charged protons. The excess electrons will repel each other and attract positive charges in the environment.
When you remove a proton from an atom, it changes into a different element. The element becomes one with an atomic number one less than before, which affects its chemical properties. This process alters the balance of positive and negative charges within the nucleus, potentially leading to radioactive decay in certain situations.
The name of the nonmetal in a binary compound with ionic bonds is modified to end in -ide. In ionic compounds with more than one nonmetal, including oxygen, other modifications of the name are used.
it becomes an ion. an ion of any element has the same number of protons but different number of electrons. an ion can be of two types. cation and anion. cation is positive i.e. one less electron and an anion is negative, i.e. one more electron. so that's the answer to your original question. if an electron is added, the atom of the element becomes negatively charged.
Electrons are transferred from one element to another. when electrons are shared this is a covalent bond.
It becomes a negatively charged ion with a charge of 1-.
When a nonmetal and a metal bond, the nonmetal gains electrons from the metal to form an ionic bond. The nonmetal becomes negatively charged (anion) and the metal becomes positively charged (cation), resulting in an electrostatic attraction between the two ions.
Cations are formed when elements lose electrons. Then they get positively charged.
it gets bigger!
A nonmetal will gain one or more electrons in order to form a negatively charged ion.
When an element forms a negative ion, the name changes to IDE, fir example: chloride
They lose electrons.
it becomes positively charged.
a reaction happens
It becomes a negatively charged ion.
It then becomes a negatively-charged diamond.
an atom loses electrons and becomes positivly charged