Sulfur is a non metal element. There are 16 electrons in a single atom.
34 - 16, the atomic number of sulfur [note correct spelling] or 18.
Sulfur has 16 electrons and typically has 16 neutrons (its most common isotope, sulfur-32). The number of neutrons can vary slightly in different isotopes of sulfur.
Number of neutrons = Mass number - atomic number = 23 - 9 = 14
The mass number indicates the number of protons AND neutrons in the nucleus. Since the number of neutrons can vary, so can the mass number. The different versions of elements based on the number of neutrons are called isotopes. Sulfur-35 has an atomic mass of 35. So, it has a total of 35 protons and neutrons in the nucleus. Since sulfur always has 16 protons, then the number of neutrons in this isotope is 19. (35 - 16 = 19)
21 protons, 21 electrons and 23 neutrons
Sulfur-23 has 16 protons, 16 neutrons, and 16 electrons.
Sulfur typically has 16 neutrons.
16 neutrons and 16 protons
16
16,9,16
An atom of sulfur has 16 protons and 16 electrons. Depending on the isotope, it can have anywhere from 16 to 20 neutrons.
16 protons 20 neutrons
Sulfur has... Protons: 16 (just like its atomic number) Neutrons: 16 Electrons: 16
The isotope sulfur-25 doesn't exist.
A sulfer atom has: 16 electrons, 16 protons and 16 neutrons but sulfer ions and isotopes do exist where this is different
19 neutrons 16 protons and electrons
The most stable isotope of sulfur (S-32) has 16 electrons, 16 protons and 16 neutrons.