Phosphorus has larger ionic radius than sulfur. There is more nuclear attraction in sulfur.
francium has the largest ionic radius
yes, in an ionic bond. But you would need two lithiums with one Sulfur.
Fluorine.
(Chlorine, Fluorine, anything that gains an electron when it ionizes) For example: when F becomes F−, it gains one electron but has the same number of protons, meaning the attraction of the protons to the electrons is weaker, creating a larger radius.
in the case of non-metals, the anions are formed by the addition of electrons. So the ionic radius is larger than that of the atomic radius
francium has the largest ionic radius
yes, in an ionic bond. But you would need two lithiums with one Sulfur.
Fluorine.
(Chlorine, Fluorine, anything that gains an electron when it ionizes) For example: when F becomes F−, it gains one electron but has the same number of protons, meaning the attraction of the protons to the electrons is weaker, creating a larger radius.
in the case of non-metals, the anions are formed by the addition of electrons. So the ionic radius is larger than that of the atomic radius
The negative ionic radius is larger than the neutral atomic radius
Sulfur is a chemical element.
The negative ionic radius is larger than the neutral atomic radius
Sulfer is an element, only compounds can be ionic. For example, NaCl is an ionic compound- something that has a metal and a non-metal.
Metal, like sodium.
fluorine i just had it for hw and im not sure
Because the metal loses an electron (making it smaller) and the non metal gains that electron, making it larger.