The electron outside the shell donate its electron to the one inside the shell
Rubidium (Rb)
No, but they did have iron goods but no metal
Nylon is a synthetic polymer. It contains no metal.
Yes Mercury is a metal and it is a liquid at room temperature.
Their the same thing, only melted. The molten metal is hot, but the only things metal cannot carry is something at the temperature of lava or higher.
This electron is lost.
Cesium (Cs) is the alkali metal that requires 4 electron shells as it has the electron configuration [Xe] 6s1.
Lithium is the alkali metal that has two energy levels in its electron configuration. Its electron configuration is [He] 2s¹.
The outer electron configuration of an alkali metal is one electron in the s subshell. This electron is easily lost to form a cation with a full valence shell, resulting in the high reactivity of alkali metals.
Yes. Rubidium is an alkali metal, and all alkali metals have one valence electron.
Hydrogen
Hydrogen.
No, scandium is not an alkali metal. It is actually classified as a transition metal due to its electron configuration and position on the periodic table.
alkali metal
here r the possisble answers: both atoms lose 1 electron a covalent bond forms metal gains an electron and the nonmetal loses an electron metal loses an electron and non metal gains an electron
the alkali metals have 1 electron in their outer most shell. in order to obtain a full outer shell they have to lose this electron. so when they react with another metal they lose this electron and the outer most shell.
The alkali metals exist in group one of the Periodic Table; as such, they are in the s-block. The electron configuration for each alkali metal ends in ns1. When represented in an Aufbau diagram, the outer shell electron has an "up" spin. Because of their single outer shell electron, alkali metals react well with halogens.