A carbon atom has a total of six electrons occupying the first two shells, i.e., the K-shell has two electrons and the L-shell has four electrons. This distribution indicates that in the outermost shell there are one completely filled 's' orbital and two half-filled 'p' orbitals, showing carbon to be a divalent atom. But in actuality, carbon displays tetravalency in the combined state. Therefore, a carbon atom has four valence electrons. It could gain four electrons to form C4- anion or lose four electrons to form C4+ cation. Both these conditions would take carbon far away from achieving stability by the octect rule. To overcome this problem carbon undergoes bonding by sharing its valence electrons. This allows it to be covalently bonded to one, two, three or four carbon atoms or atoms of other elements or groups of atoms.
The condensed electron configuration for copper is Ar 3d10 4s1.
The condensed electron configuration for polonium is [Xe] 6s2 4f14 5d10 6p4
The element with this electron configuration is carbon (C). This electron configuration corresponds to 6 electrons, which is the atomic number of carbon.
The electron configuration of carbon dioxide (CO2) is 1s2 2s2 2p2.
The short electron configuration for carbon is [He] 2s^2 2p^2.
The condensed electron configuration for copper is Ar 3d10 4s1.
1s^2 2s^2 2p^2
The electron configuration of mendelevium is [Rn]5f13.7s2.
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The condensed electron configuration for polonium is [Xe] 6s2 4f14 5d10 6p4
[Kr],5s2,4d10,5p1
The "Noble gas electron configuration," or the condensed electron configuration, for F is [He] 2s2 3p5.
The long form electron configuration for carbon is simply 1s2 2s2 2p2. The noble gas shortcut electron configuration for C is [He] 2s2 2p2.
The element with this electron configuration is carbon (C). This electron configuration corresponds to 6 electrons, which is the atomic number of carbon.
the condensed electron configuration for Lu is [Xe] 6s^2 4f^14 5d^1
The electron configuration of carbon dioxide (CO2) is 1s2 2s2 2p2.
The short electron configuration for carbon is [He] 2s^2 2p^2.