Sulfur has 10 core electrons.
Because the core electrons = all electrons that aren't valence electrons.
Sulfur has 16 electrons; 6 valence and 10 core.
Atomic number of sulfur = Number of protons = Number of electrons = 16
Carbon has 2 core electrons. Core electrons are the inner electrons of an atom that are not involved in chemical bonding.
The atomic number is 16, so a sulfur atom has 16 protons in the nucleus and 16 electrons in the electron cloud.
There are 20 valence electrons in the expanded valence structure of sulfur dioxide. This includes the electrons from the sulfur atom (6 valence electrons) and each oxygen atom (6 valence electrons each).
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
All the isotopes of sulfur has 16 electrons.
Sulfur has 6 valence electrons.
A neutral atom of sulfur has 16 electrons.
The core electron configuration of sulfur is [Ne] 3s^2 3p^4, where [Ne] represents the electron configuration of the noble gas neon. This indicates that sulfur has a full 3s subshell and 4 electrons in the 3p subshell within its core electron configuration.
Sulfur has 6 electrons in the valence shell.
There are 6 valence electrons in the sulfur atom.
16 electrons
6 electrons and 16 protons.
Each sulfur atom has 6 electrons in its outermost shell.
Sulfur has six electrons in its valence shell.
Sulfur has 16 electrons.
Sulfur. It has six valence electrons. These six electrons plus the ten core electrons, 16, the atomic number (number of electrons or the number of protons [they are an equal amount because the positive and negative charges have to cancel each other out]). It is sulfur.