24, considering that an electron has a negative charge and the number of protons (positivley charged) is 24, an atom has to be neutrally charged
The chromium ion in its +4 oxidation state (Cr^4+) has lost four electrons. Chromium has an atomic number of 24, which means a neutral chromium atom has 24 electrons. Therefore, a Cr^4+ ion has 24 - 4 = 20 electrons.
Chromium lose 6 or 3 electrons.
A chromium (Cr) atom has 6 valence electrons.
Many Transition Metals can have different numbers of valence electrons. The "II" means it has 2 valence electrons.Thanks & Regards,Shoaib Khan - SRKMob: +91-9534330837Email: shoaibrazakhan@gmail.com
24, in the neutral atom. I think you mean chromium-53. It doesn't matter - the atomic number (the number of protons in the nuceus determines how many electrons there are in the neutral atom - the mass number ( the total protons and neutrons does not affect the number of electrons)
The chromium ion in its +4 oxidation state (Cr^4+) has lost four electrons. Chromium has an atomic number of 24, which means a neutral chromium atom has 24 electrons. Therefore, a Cr^4+ ion has 24 - 4 = 20 electrons.
There are eight electrons in the third level of a chromium atom.There are four level in the chromium atom, and the fourth level, unfilled, contains 6 out of 18 electrons, in the neutral, non-ionized atom.
Chromium has two electrons in the outer most shell.
When Cr3+ forms, the neutral atom (chromium) loses 3 electrons. This happens because the neutral chromium atom has 24 electrons, but when it forms Cr3+, it loses 3 electrons to have a total of 21 electrons.
24 protons and 24 electrons
The element with 24 electrons is Chromium (Cr), which has an atomic number of 24.
Chromium lose 6 or 3 electrons.
24 electrons, remember the atomic number of an element tells you how many protons it has. The number of protons = the number of electrons (if the atom isnt charged)
A chromium (Cr) atom has 6 valence electrons.
Many Transition Metals can have different numbers of valence electrons. The "II" means it has 2 valence electrons.Thanks & Regards,Shoaib Khan - SRKMob: +91-9534330837Email: shoaibrazakhan@gmail.com
24, in the neutral atom. I think you mean chromium-53. It doesn't matter - the atomic number (the number of protons in the nuceus determines how many electrons there are in the neutral atom - the mass number ( the total protons and neutrons does not affect the number of electrons)
There are 6 electrons in the third principal level (n = 3) of a chromium atom. The electron configuration of chromium is [Ar] 3d5 4s1, so there are 5 electrons in the 3d subshell and 1 electron in the 4s subshell.