The noble gas that comes before iodine is krypton.
The noble gas that comes before bromine is argon.
The nearest noble gas to iodine is xenon. Iodine is located in group 17 of the periodic table, while xenon is in group 18. Xenon has an atomic number of 54, making it the closest noble gas in terms of atomic number.
No, iodine is not a noble gas. Iodine belongs to the halogen group in the periodic table, which contains elements that are highly reactive. Noble gases are a separate group of elements that are inert and do not readily combine with other elements.
Iodine accepts one electron to achieve noble gas configuration. Strontium loses two electrons to achieve noble gas configuration. Nitrogen accepts three electrons to achieve noble gas configuration. Krypton already has a noble gas configuration.
I- ion (iodine ion and not iodine) and xenon will have the same number of electrons (54 electrons)
The noble gas that comes before bromine is argon.
The nearest noble gas to iodine is xenon. Iodine is located in group 17 of the periodic table, while xenon is in group 18. Xenon has an atomic number of 54, making it the closest noble gas in terms of atomic number.
[Kr]4d105s25p5
[Kr]4d105s25p5
No, iodine is not a noble gas. Iodine belongs to the halogen group in the periodic table, which contains elements that are highly reactive. Noble gases are a separate group of elements that are inert and do not readily combine with other elements.
Iodine accepts one electron to achieve noble gas configuration. Strontium loses two electrons to achieve noble gas configuration. Nitrogen accepts three electrons to achieve noble gas configuration. Krypton already has a noble gas configuration.
Iodine is not a "nobel" gas or even a noble gas but rather a nonmetal element that is not a gas at all at standard temperature and pressure, but a solid instead. -- Unlike the elements in the noble gas group such as neon, which are chemically very unreactive, iodine is quite reactive, like the other elements in its group such as fluorine and chlorine.
I- ion (iodine ion and not iodine) and xenon will have the same number of electrons (54 electrons)
The noble gas notation for Iron (Fe) is [Ar]4s2 3d6.
The element between tellurium and xenon is iodine. It has an atomic number of 53.
Argon is the noble gas that comes in the periodic table after chlorine.
The complete electron-configuration notation for iodine is (1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^6 4s^2 3d^{10} 4p^5). In noble-gas notation, iodine can be represented as ([Kr] 4p^5), where ([Kr]) (krypton) represents the electron configuration of the preceding noble gas.