Bromine will gain one electron.
It'll have to gain one to have a stable octet.
it gains electrons.
In phosphene it gain 4 electrons. Phosphate lose 4 electrons
because nonmetals gain electrons in ionic bonds and metals lose electrons in ionic bonds(oxidize).
silicon prefers to share electrons forming covalent bonds
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Bromine will gain one electron to become Br-
Bromine must gain one electron
An element in group 16/VIA, such as oxygen, is most likely to gain two electrons when forming an ionic bond. This is due to the fact that the atoms of the elements in group 16/VIA have six valence electrons and require two more to get a filled valence shell of 8 electrons (octet rule).
It'll have to gain one to have a stable octet.
Boron can lose 3 electrons from its valence shell that is 2 in 2s & 1 in 2p sub-shell, wheras it cannot gain electron b'coz of its electropositive nature & it has less electron affinity.
it gains electrons.
Potassium would lose electrons in all its reactions especially with Bromine.
Br typically gains one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration, rather than losing electrons.
Bromine gain one electron and become Br-.
Some atoms lose electrons, some gain electrons, and some share electrons depending on what elements are involved and what compound is forming.
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