Chlorine has one more electron then sulfur, so it has 1 more electron in the outer shell, 1 more valence electron. Chlorine has 5 electrons in the outermost shell and sulfur has 4.
Electrons are shared between the chlorine atoms and the bromine atoms.
No. The difference between these two isotopes of chlorine is in the number of neutrons that their nuclei have, while chemical properties are determined almost solely by the numbers and configurations of electrons in neutral atoms, which are the same for both isotopes of chlorine.
copper is a red solid. Chlorine is a greenish gas.
The difference in electronegativity between sodium and chlorine is the reason.
No, they form a covalent compound because there is not a great enough difference in electronegativity for one element to completely pull the electrons away from the other.
Chloride is an ion of chlorine plus one electron. In solution, calcium is an ion missing two electrons.
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Electrons are shared between the chlorine atoms and the bromine atoms.
A neutral chlorine atom has 7 valence electrons and needs one more valence electron in order to be stable with an octet. A chlorine molecule consists of two chlorine atoms that have formed a covalent bond between them, so that each chlorine atom effectively has an octet of valence electrons, which makes the chlorine atoms stable. A chloride ion is a chlorine atom that has gained an electron, becoming a charged particle with a charge of 1-.
Only one, from sodium to chlorine.
The chlorine atoms share two electrons between themselves, while the oxygen atoms share four. This can alternatively be stated as a single bond between the two chlorine atoms and a double bond between the two oxygen atoms.
electrons*
Chlorine-37 has more neutrons in it than Chlorine 35
Electrons are transferred from sodium atoms to chlorine atoms.
A chlorine radical is simply Cl. with no charge but free electrons wanting to bond. A Cl atom basically. A chlorine molecule is Cl2 (two atoms bonded covalently). A chloride ion is Cl-. Many people confuse an ion with a radical. They are not the same.
copper is a red solid. Chlorine is a greenish gas.
No. The difference between these two isotopes of chlorine is in the number of neutrons that their nuclei have, while chemical properties are determined almost solely by the numbers and configurations of electrons in neutral atoms, which are the same for both isotopes of chlorine.