Isotope.
We call these different "flavors" of an element the isotopes of that element.
An element can exist in different atomic forms known as isotopes, which have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. For example, carbon has isotopes like carbon-12 and carbon-14. Additionally, an element can form ions by gaining or losing electrons, resulting in charged particles with different electron configurations.
Allotropes-different forms of the same element ex. diamond and graphite for carbon different arrangement of the atoms Actually it is diamond, charcoal, and GRAPHITE... Not carbon
Allotopes are forms of a chemical element different by structure.
allotropy is a phenomenon where an element exists in different forms having different physical properties and same chemical properties is known as allotropy.
No, not really. An element has a single atomic weight, which is the weighted average of all the isotopes of that element, weighted by their natural abundance. Each element only has a single atomic weight.What this means is that different atoms of a single element can weigh different amounts because different isotopes have different numbers of neutrons. However, the atomic weight represents the average for all forms of that element, and so there is only one value. The different isotopes of an element certainly have different mass numbers, which is just the sum of the number of neutrons and protons however.
Isotopes
Isotopes
Isotopes.
Isotopes
Isotopes.
Isotopes
Isotopes are different forms of an element that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons.
A single element can have two different variations. An isotope is a variant caused by a different number of neutrons. An ion is a variation caused by a different number of electrons than the parent atom.
disserent structural forms of the sme element are called
A single element cation and single element anion form a binary ionic compound, where one element is a metal and the other is a nonmetal. The metal forms the cation by losing electrons, while the nonmetal forms the anion by gaining electrons. Examples include NaCl (sodium chloride) and KBr (potassium bromide).
Isotopes.