yes it does.
potassium and argon are isoelectronic
Potassium and chlorine are the only two that can.
The noble gas configuration of hydrogen is 1s1, as it has one electron in its outer shell. Hydrogen can achieve stability by gaining or losing one electron to have a full valence shell like the noble gas helium.
Potassium will become more stable by losing one electron from its outer shell, resulting in a positively charged ion (K+). This loss of an electron allows potassium to achieve a stable electron configuration, similar to that of the nearest noble gas, argon. By doing so, it reduces its reactivity and increases its stability.
ang answer ana kay wa ko kahibalo baw
Boron gains noble gas configuration by losing 3 electrons. So it forms positive ions.
Argon (Ar) is the nearest noble gas to potassium.
No, potassium does not have a noble gas electron configuration. The noble gas configuration for potassium would be [Ar] 4s¹, but instead, potassium has the electron configuration 1s² 2s² 2p^6 3s² 3p^6 4s¹.
Potassium loses one electron to form K+ ion that has the noble gas configuration of the element neon.
The noble gas configuration for potassium is [Ar] 4s^1. To form a cation, potassium would lose its one valence electron, resulting in a 1+ ion. Therefore, the ion formed when potassium achieves a noble gas electron configuration is K^+.
The noble gas electron configuration for potassium is [Ar] 4s^1. It represents the electron configuration of potassium by using the electron configuration of argon ([Ar] = 1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^6) as the noble gas core and then adding the additional 4s^1 electron for potassium.
Potassium has one valence electron that it would lose to become octet happy, or like a noble gas..therefore K(+1 charge)
Potassium and helium do not form an ionic bond because they belong to different groups on the periodic table. Potassium is a metal in group 1, while helium is a noble gas in group 18. Due to their large difference in electronegativity and stability, they are unlikely to transfer electrons to form an ionic bond.
Potassium and chlorine are the only two that can.
k1-
The ion formed when potassium achieves noble-gas electron configuration is K+ (potassium ion). This occurs when potassium loses one electron to have a full outer electron shell, similar to the nearest noble gas, argon.
K+
The noble gas configuration of hydrogen is 1s1, as it has one electron in its outer shell. Hydrogen can achieve stability by gaining or losing one electron to have a full valence shell like the noble gas helium.