Nickel has an atomic number of 28- so if there aare only 26 electrons - 2 are missing and the ion will have a harge of 2+.
The answer is Ni3+
In a neutral atom of nickel (Ni28) has 28 electrons. These 28 electrons each have a charge of -1, and that makes a total electron charge of -28. For the charge in coulombs, take the charge of one electron, which is -1.602 × 10-19 coulombs and multiply it by 28. This isn't right because you have to account for the protons in the nucleus of the atom. It should be zero. I think what your looking for is its ionization charge, which I don't know off the top of my head
copper has more protons than nickel
Yes, an atom can have charge. Atoms consist of protons, which have a positive charge, neutrons, which have no charge, and electrons, which have a negative charge. The overall charge of an atom depends on the balance of these particles.
An atomic number of 28 implies that a neutrally charged atom would have 28 electrons. If it has a positive charge of +2 then that would imply the ion was deficient by 2 electrons - hence a total of 28-2 = 26 electrons.
The answer is Ni3+
In a neutral atom of nickel (Ni28) has 28 electrons. These 28 electrons each have a charge of -1, and that makes a total electron charge of -28. For the charge in coulombs, take the charge of one electron, which is -1.602 × 10-19 coulombs and multiply it by 28. This isn't right because you have to account for the protons in the nucleus of the atom. It should be zero. I think what your looking for is its ionization charge, which I don't know off the top of my head
copper has more protons than nickel
copper has more protons than nickel
copper has more protons than nickel
copper has more protons than nickel
copper has more protons than nickel
copper has more protons than nickel
If the oxidation is iii,charge also +3.Fluoride has -1 charge on it.
Yes nickel is a cation. the formula for Nickel would be Ni+ for Nickel II it would be Ni+2 and for Nickel III it would be Ni+3
copper has more protons than nickel
what changes the charge of the atom