A sodium atom has a net charge of zero. A sodium ion has a net charge of 1+.
The electrical charge of a sodium atom that loses an electron would be +1. This is because sodium has 11 protons and normally 11 electrons, but losing one electron would result in 10 electrons, giving it a net positive charge of +1.
A sodium ion differs from a sodium atom in that the sodium ion has a missing electron electron. It has a positive charge, as opposed to the atom, which is neutral.
Not quite. The symbol Na+ represents a sodium ion that has lost one electron, giving it a net positive charge. It no longer behaves like a neutral sodium atom and is more reactive in forming compounds.
Sodium chloride is neutral.
Ions formed from sodium atoms have a charge of +1. Sodium easily loses one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration, resulting in a sodium ion with a +1 charge.
A sodium atom has a positive charge because it loses one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration, leaving it with more protons than electrons. This imbalance creates a net positive charge on the sodium atom.
A sodium atom contains eleven electrons and has a net neutral electrical charge, because the atom also contains eleven protons. A sodium ion contains only ten electrons and has an electrical charge of +1, because it also contains 11 protons.
The electrical charge of a sodium atom that loses an electron would be +1. This is because sodium has 11 protons and normally 11 electrons, but losing one electron would result in 10 electrons, giving it a net positive charge of +1.
Sodium in its stable state have 11 electrons. Sodium with one net positive charge have 10 electrons in it. Sodium metal combines with chlorine gas to form table salt.
The charge of a sodium atom that has lost 1 electron is +1. This is because sodium normally has 11 protons and 11 electrons, but when it loses 1 electron, it now has 11 protons and 10 electrons, resulting in a net positive charge of +1.
When a sodium atom loses an electron, it becomes a positively charged sodium ion (Na+). This is because when an electron is lost, the number of protons in the nucleus of the atom is greater than the number of electrons, resulting in a net positive charge.
If an electron is removed from a sodium atom that has eleven protons, the resulting ion would have a net charge of +1. This is because the atom originally had 11 protons and 11 electrons (11 positive charges and 11 negative charges), but by removing one electron, there is now one more positive charge than negative charge, resulting in a net positive charge of +1.
The net charge of an atom is always zero, because if an atom gains or loses electrons, causing it to acquire a net charge, we then call it an ion, rather than an atom.
Sodium sulfate has the molecular formula Na2SO4. This is because sodium has a net charge of +1 and SO4 has a net charge of -2.
When a sodium atom loses 2 electrons, it becomes positively charged because it has more protons than electrons. Sodium typically has 11 protons and 11 electrons, so losing 2 electrons results in a net charge of +2. Therefore, the charge of the sodium ion after losing 2 electrons is +2, denoted as Na²⁺.
The Sodium atom with be positively charged [it will have a single positive charge]
The sodium ion has less electrons than protons whereas the sodium atom has an equal amount of protons and electrons