Certain gases do not exist unless they are manufactured. Examples would be fluorine or Chlorine. As they are highly reactive they wouldn't even exist for long if they were created. The same can be said for a lot of eccentric gaseous compounds.
For naturally occurring gases Krypton and Xenon are the rarest Nobel gases.
Co is cobalt and is not a noble gas. Cobalt is a transition metal. Its electron configuration is [Ar]3d74s2.
The electron configuration of boron is: [He]2s2.2p1.
No, potassium does not have a noble gas electron configuration. The noble gas configuration for potassium would be [Ar] 4s¹, but instead, potassium has the electron configuration 1s² 2s² 2p^6 3s² 3p^6 4s¹.
The noble gas configuration for rhodium (Rh) is [Kr] 4d^8 5s^1. This configuration represents the electron arrangement of rhodium where the outermost electron shell is filled with the equivalent of a noble gas (krypton) configuration.
The correct noble gas configuration for Li is neon (1s^2 2s^1).
The "Noble gas electron configuration," or the condensed electron configuration, for F is [He] 2s2 3p5.
The noble gas electron configuration of radon is [Xe]4f145d106s26p6.
No, it is not a rare gas
No, chlorine (Cl) does not have a noble gas electronic configuration. It has the electron configuration [Ne]3s^2 3p^5, which is one electron away from achieving a stable, noble gas configuration like argon (Ar).
The electron configuration of polonium is: [Xe]6s24f145d106p4.
The electronic configuration of Ga is 1s22s22p63s23p64s23104p1 Expressed as a noble gas configuration this is [Ar] 4s2, 3d10, 4p1
The noble gas configuration of sulfur is [Ne]3s2 3p4. It represents the electron configuration of sulfur when it has achieved a stable electronic configuration similar to the nearest noble gas, neon.
The noble gas configuration of oxygen (O) is [He] 2s^2 2p^4, where [He] represents the electron configuration of the nearest noble gas, helium.
Only group 18 elements have noble gas configuration. All other elements lack a noble gas electronic configuration.
Co is cobalt and is not a noble gas. Cobalt is a transition metal. Its electron configuration is [Ar]3d74s2.
The electron configuration of copernicium is: [Rn]5f14.6d8.7s2.
Atoms lose or gain or share electrons and tend to attain noble gas configuration