The first and second energy level will hold maximum of 2 and 8 electrons.
Everything after the secong level.
L1= 2 electrons
L2+ = 8 electrons
Hope this helped!
More energy have the electrons in the second level of energy.
Carbon has four electrons in the outermost energy level, which is energy level two. It needs eight electrons to have this energy level filled.
More energy have the electrons in the second level of energy.
Sulfur has 6 electrons in its outer energy level. This means it needs 2 more electrons to fill its outer energy level, for a total of 8 electrons.
Atoms form chemical bonds to achieve a full outermost energy level by sharing, gaining, or losing electrons. Valence electrons are the electrons in the outermost energy level of an atom, and having a full outermost energy level makes the atom more stable. This stability is achieved when there are eight electrons in the outermost energy level, known as the octet rule.
The first and second energy level will hold maximum of 2 and 8 electrons.
The valence electrons of an atom are those electrons that are in its outer energy shell or that are available for bonding. The electrons more loosely held by the nucleus - are the ones that are gained, lost or shared.
The energy level that holds a maximum of 8 electrons holds the most energy because 8 electrons = maximum stability so it takes more energy to break away an electron. The energy level that holds a maximum of 8 electrons holds the most energy because 8 electrons = maximum stability so it takes more energy to break away an electron. The energy level that holds a maximum of 8 electrons holds the most energy because 8 electrons = maximum stability so it takes more energy to break away an electron. The energy level that holds a maximum of 8 electrons holds the most energy because 8 electrons = maximum stability so it takes more energy to break away an electron.
The third and higher energy levels can hold more than 8 electrons. The third energy level has 18 electrons, the fourth has 32, and so on. Each successive energy level can hold more electrons than the one before it.
More energy have the electrons in the second level of energy.
Carbon has four electrons in the outermost energy level, which is energy level two. It needs eight electrons to have this energy level filled.
More energy have the electrons in the second level of energy.
no, up to 18 electrons only in the 3rd energy level.
An atom has multiple energy levels. When an atom has more electrons than it can fit into an energy level, then it puts them into the next higher energy level.
The maximum number of electrons that the outermost valence energy level can hold is 8. This is true for most elements, as the valence energy level typically holds no more than 8 electrons in accordance with the octet rule.
Sulfur has 6 electrons in its outer energy level. This means it needs 2 more electrons to fill its outer energy level, for a total of 8 electrons.
Phosphorus has more outer electrons than silicon. Phosphorus has 5 outer electrons in the third energy level, while silicon has 4 outer electrons in the third energy level.