Characterise the following 'row': 2, 8, 18, 32, 50, 72, 98
K shell has 2
L shell has 8
M shell has 18
N shell has 32 electrons
First shell contains atmost two electrons. The formula is 2n. where n is the no. of shell u want to calculate its capacity of no of electrons..thanku
Maximum number of electrons = 2n2, where n is the number of shell (n = 1 for K, 2 for L, 3 for M, and so on) K shell has 2 electrons maximum L shell has 8 electrons maximum M shell has 18 electrons maximum N shell has 32 electrons maximum O shell has 50 electrons maximum P shell has 72 electrons maximum
Maximum number of possible electrons in each shell: K - 2 L - 8 M - 8 N - 18
The maximum number of electrons that can be accommodated in the outermost shell of an atom is determined by the formula (2n^2), where (n) is the principal quantum number of that shell. For the first shell ((n=1)), it can hold 2 electrons; for the second shell ((n=2)), it can hold 8 electrons; for the third shell ((n=3)), it can hold 18 electrons; and for the fourth shell ((n=4)), it can hold 32 electrons. However, for practical purposes regarding chemical bonding, the outermost shell is often considered full with 8 electrons, following the octet rule.
The formula for getting the total number electrons occupying a shell is given by 2n2 For M shell the principal quantum number, that is, 'n' is 3. So 2 x 9 = 18 For N shell its quantum number is 4 and hence 32 electrons.
First shell contains atmost two electrons. The formula is 2n. where n is the no. of shell u want to calculate its capacity of no of electrons..thanku
Maximum number of electrons = 2n2, where n is the number of shell (n = 1 for K, 2 for L, 3 for M, and so on) K shell has 2 electrons maximum L shell has 8 electrons maximum M shell has 18 electrons maximum N shell has 32 electrons maximum O shell has 50 electrons maximum P shell has 72 electrons maximum
Maximum number of possible electrons in each shell: K - 2 L - 8 M - 8 N - 18
There are 19 electrons present in the N shell of potassium. Potassium has the electron configuration 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s1. The electrons in the N shell include those in the 2s, 2p, 3s, and 3p subshells.
The maximum number of electrons that can be accommodated in the outermost shell of an atom is determined by the formula (2n^2), where (n) is the principal quantum number of that shell. For the first shell ((n=1)), it can hold 2 electrons; for the second shell ((n=2)), it can hold 8 electrons; for the third shell ((n=3)), it can hold 18 electrons; and for the fourth shell ((n=4)), it can hold 32 electrons. However, for practical purposes regarding chemical bonding, the outermost shell is often considered full with 8 electrons, following the octet rule.
The formula for getting the total number electrons occupying a shell is given by 2n2 For M shell the principal quantum number, that is, 'n' is 3. So 2 x 9 = 18 For N shell its quantum number is 4 and hence 32 electrons.
The n=3 shell can hold a maximum of 18 electrons. Sulfur has 16 electrons in its neutral state, so it can accommodate 2 more electrons in its n=3 shell.
maximum 32 electrons
Oxygen has 8 electrons in total. The distribution of these electrons in shells KLMN is as follows: K shell has 2 electrons, L shell has 6 electrons, M shell has 0 electrons, and N shell has 0 electrons.
There can be 10 electrons in the n=2 shell. Two can fit in the 1s orbital, two can fit in the 2s orbital, and six can fit in the 2p orbital.
The second electron shell (n=2) can hold a maximum of 8 electrons. This shell consists of 2 subshells, the s subshell with 2 electrons and the p subshell with 6 electrons, giving a total of 8 electrons.
The first shell can hold a maximum of 2 electrons. The second shell can accommodate up to 8 electrons. This is based on the formula 2n², where n is the principal quantum number representing the shell level. Thus, for the first shell (n=1), 2(1)² = 2, and for the second shell (n=2), 2(2)² = 8.