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No. Chlorine is not a metal with magnetic properties.
1: Chloride is not a substance that occurs on its own, it is an ion formed by the element chlorine. 2: Neither chlorine nor chlorides (substances containing the chloride ion) are magnetic.
Chlorine's mass number is 35.5. This is an average value due to the presence of two isotopes of chlorine, chlorine-35 and chlorine-37, in nature.
Free Chlorine is the Chlorine which is free to do its work in the pool, as opposed to Combined Chlorine which is chlorine that has combined with contaminants and is tied up and ineffective as a sanitizer in the pool. Sometimes you will see it abbreviated as FAC, which stands for Free Available Chlorine.
Answer is at the end, skip to there if you just want the answer. Chlorine has 17 electrons. To find the four quantum numbers you first find N. Chlorine's electron configuration is 1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^5 Chlorine's last electrons occupy the 3p subshell. Therefore N = 3 Next you find l (Lower Case L) Every subshell letter has a numerical value. S=0 P=1 D=2 F=3 Until you reach (N-1) Remembering the last electron ends in the 3p subshell, we find P=1 so l=1 Next we find the Magnetic Quantum Number which is anywhere from (-l)-0-(+l) in value. Finding this value requires more of an understanding of subshells. S subshells can hold 2 electrons, P subshells can hold 6, and D can hold 10. These occur in pairs of two. Cl's electron configuration is 1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^5 Imagine each shell containing boxes that hold two electrons. Each box has a value. Since 3p holds 6 electrons, it will have 3 boxes of two. Fill the boxes with one electron each as an up arrow, and then add a second electron as a down arrow from left to right, until you have used all 17 of Chlorine's electrons. If you do that it will look like this. 3p [II] [II] [I ] The first box's Magnetic Quantum number will be -1 the middle will be 0 and the first will be +1. The last electron we drew was in the middle box, which equals 0. To find ms or the Spin Magnetic Number you imagine the up arrows as +1/2 and down arrows as -1/2. Because the last electron drawn was a down arrow, it equals -1/2. Consider all these numbers together and ... Chlorine is as follows: N:3 (Because of the 3 in 3p) l:1 (Because p equals 1) ml:0 (Because of where the final electron drawn ends) ms: -1/2 (Because the last electron drawn was a down arrow)
No. Chlorine is not a metal with magnetic properties.
Chlorine is diamagnetic, meaning it has no unpaired electrons and is weakly repelled by magnetic fields.
1: Chloride is not a substance that occurs on its own, it is an ion formed by the element chlorine. 2: Neither chlorine nor chlorides (substances containing the chloride ion) are magnetic.
No, ammonium chloride is not magnetic. It will not be attracted to magnets. Ammonium chloride is made up of the elements nitrogen, hydrogen and chlorine.
A common type of level indicator used in chlorine storage tanks is a magnetic level indicator. This type of indicator uses a float with a magnetic element inside the tank that moves up and down with the liquid level, causing the external indicator to change accordingly. Magnetic level indicators are often preferred for chlorine tanks due to their reliability and ability to provide accurate level readings.
Forrest Rosecrans Biard has written: 'Nuclear magnetic moments of nitrogen(14), chlorine(37), and indium(115)' -- subject(s): Physics
The element with an atomic mass of 35.453 is chlorine. It is a halogen and has the atomic number 17.
Chlorine has a lot of different isotopes but the 2 stable ones are chlorine 35 and chlorine 37
Chlorine (Cl) atoms make up the element chlorine.
Chlorine
Chlorine dioxide is a different chemical compound from chlorine. While they both contain the element chlorine, there is no chlorine in the form of Cl2 in chlorine dioxide. Chlorine dioxide (ClO2) is a strong oxidizing agent used for water treatment and disinfection.
Chlorine's mass number is 35.5. This is an average value due to the presence of two isotopes of chlorine, chlorine-35 and chlorine-37, in nature.