Yes.
The stable ion for aluminum (Al) is Al³⁺. Aluminum typically loses three electrons from its outer shell to achieve a stable electron configuration, resulting in a positive charge of +3. This ion is commonly found in various compounds, such as aluminum oxide (Al₂O₃) and aluminum sulfate (Al₂(SO₄)₃).
Aluminum has trivalent cation. It is Al3+
The stable ion of iron has a charge of +2, also known as Fe2+.
The stable ion of aluminum is Al 3+, which means it has three fewer electrons. The aluminum atom has shed its outer shell of 3s2 3p1 and has an electron configuration equal to that of Neon, or 1s2 2s2 2p6.
The electron configuration of 1s2 2s2 2p6 corresponds to a neutral atom of Neon (atomic number 10). A 3+ ion would have lost all its valence electrons, leaving behind a stable 1s2 2s2 2p6 configuration, giving it the electron configuration of a Neon ion.
An ion that comes from Al typically has a 3+ charge. This is because Aluminum (Al) loses three electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration, making it a cation with a 3+ charge.
The third period element that forms a 3- ion is sulfur.
Aluminum has trivalent cation. It is Al3+
Aluminum (Al) is in group 3A and so has 3 valence electrons. It can easily lose these to become Al^3+, so the charge would be +3.
The Al (aluminum) ion exists in the 3+ state.
The stable ion of iron has a charge of +2, also known as Fe2+.
Aluminum typically forms the Al3+ ion. This ion loses three electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
The stable ion of aluminum is Al 3+, which means it has three fewer electrons. The aluminum atom has shed its outer shell of 3s2 3p1 and has an electron configuration equal to that of Neon, or 1s2 2s2 2p6.
It would become an Aluminum ion that has a 3+ charge
every element
The phosphide ion is stable
-3 electrons are gained,i.e,3 electrons are lost by Al and 3 electrons are gained by the other atom nearby.