Each and every element after Lithium has these orbitals.
silicon
Vanadium (V) contains 5 electrons in its 3d orbitals.
It could be the element Phosphorus, the p orbitals in an atomic shell, etc.
Electron Orbitals can form a hybrid in order to achieve a more stable element: sp, sp2, sp3, sp3d, sp3d2
You would have to determine the electron configuration for atoms of a given element. Each s sublevel contains 1 orbital, each p sublevel contains 3 orbitals, each d sublevel contain 5 orbitals, and each f sublevel contains 7 orbitals. Click on the related link to see a periodic table that shows electron configurations for the elements.
apparently 8. according to another website. :)
silicon
Vanadium (V) contains 5 electrons in its 3d orbitals.
Yes,It Is :)
Three completely filled orbitals.
all elements in a period have the same amount of orbitals and if an element is in period 2 it has 2 orbitals if it is in period 3 it has 3 orbitals ..etc
The element with only 3 orbitals is lithium (Li). The electron configuration is 1s^2 2s^1, indicating that it has one electron in the 2s orbital.
The element magnesium has the same number of electron orbitals as sodium - both have three electron orbitals. Sodium and magnesium are in the same period on the periodic table, which means they have the same number of electron shells.
4
Because it has completely filled valence orbitals.
If the valence electrons are being added to the 4f orbitals, that means the element is lanthanides or actinides which further proves that the element is a heavy element and a member of f -block.
Actinide and lanthanide electrons are typically found in f-orbitals. These orbitals are part of the inner electron shells and have a distinctive shape compared to the s and p orbitals.