Yes, otherwise it wouldn't make that famous alkali explosion.
Sodium will lose 1 electron in its compounds.
Sodium atom lose an electron.
sodium (Na) Sodium atoms lose one electron when reacting with a nonmetal. Chlorine atoms gain an electron when reacting with a metal, or share an electron when reacting with other nonmetals. Aluminum loses three electrons when reacting with a nonmetal. Assuming that ze is supposed to be Xe, which is the noble gas xenon, which undergoes very few reactions and definitely does not lose an electron when it does.
Sodium does not have a full outer valence shell. It has one electron in its outermost shell, which makes it very reactive and likely to lose that electron to achieve stability.
Sulfur must lose six electrons to attain noble gas electron configuration (in SO3, H2SO4 etc) but in most of the compounds it will exist as sulphides which is formed when sulphur will gain two electrons.
Sodium will lose 1 electron to form a sodium ion.
Sodium wants to lose one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration, similar to the noble gas neon.
lose an electron, forms Na+, sodium with a charge of plus one.
Sodium will lose 1 electron in its compounds.
The particle of dissolved sodium is a positively charged sodium ion. Sodium atoms lose one electron to become stable, forming sodium ions when dissolved in water.
Alkali metals like sodium are highly reactive because they have one electron in their outermost shell, making them easily lose this electron to form a stable electron configuration. This tendency to lose an electron quickly leads to vigorous reactions with other substances. Sodium reacts violently with water, for example, because it readily donates its outer electron to water molecules, releasing hydrogen gas and forming sodium hydroxide.
A neutral sodium atom must lose one electron to have the electron configuration of neon, which has a stable electron configuration with a full outer shell. Sodium typically forms a +1 cation by losing this one electron to achieve a stable configuration like neon.
Sodium typically loses one electron to achieve a stable electron configuration. This loss of an electron forms a sodium ion with a positive charge.
Sodium only has one valence (outer shell) electron. It wants to fulfill the octet rule and have a full (8 valence electrons) outer shell. It could do this by adding 7 electrons to the one that's already there, or it could simply lose the one electron it has because the next shell is already full. But since it is "easier" for sodium to lose a single electron and requires the least amount of energy, this is what it does.
Because Sodium is in group 1, it tends to lose one electron when forming an ion, therefore having a charge of +1
Sodium atoms will typically lose 1 electron when they react with a nonmetal to form an ionic compound. This electron loss enables sodium to achieve a stable electron configuration similar to that of a noble gas.
A single electron to form Na+