Silicon is p-block element. It has 4 valence electrons. It is present in group-14.
Titanium has 4 valence electrons. It is in the third period. Titanium is a metal element.
The element with 1 electron in period 1 would be hydrogen.
In period 2 of the periodic table, lithium (Li) has the fewest valence electrons, with only one valence electron. It is located in Group 1, which is characterized by having a single electron in the outermost shell. Other elements in period 2, such as beryllium and the nonmetals, have more valence electrons.
The element in group V of the periodic table with 3 electron shells is Phosphorus (P). Group V elements have 5 valence electrons and the number of electron shells corresponds to the period number on the periodic table, so a Group V element with 3 electron shells is in period 3.
The element in the same period as helium that has only one valence electron is lithium. Both helium and lithium are located in Period 1 of the periodic table, with helium in Group 18 (noble gases) and lithium in Group 1 (alkali metals). Lithium has the atomic number 3 and has one electron in its outermost shell, making it highly reactive.
Hydrogen has 1 valence electron, whereas helium has 2 valence electrons.
The element with 1 electron in period 1 would be hydrogen.
Potassium (K) has one valence electron and is located in period 4 of the periodic table.
In period 2 of the periodic table, lithium (Li) has the fewest valence electrons, with only one valence electron. It is located in Group 1, which is characterized by having a single electron in the outermost shell. Other elements in period 2, such as beryllium and the nonmetals, have more valence electrons.
Selenium. As you go across the groups, not counting the transition metals, a valence electron is added.
Electron configuration is the arrangement of elements according to their increasing atomic numbers whiles period is the arrangement of elements according to the increasing number of valence electrons.
This element is sulfur; the electron configuration of sulfur is [Ne]3s23p4. Sulfur has three electron shells cotaining 2, 8 and 6 electrons. The last six are valence electrons.
The element in group V of the periodic table with 3 electron shells is Phosphorus (P). Group V elements have 5 valence electrons and the number of electron shells corresponds to the period number on the periodic table, so a Group V element with 3 electron shells is in period 3.
The element in the same period as helium that has only one valence electron is lithium. Both helium and lithium are located in Period 1 of the periodic table, with helium in Group 18 (noble gases) and lithium in Group 1 (alkali metals). Lithium has the atomic number 3 and has one electron in its outermost shell, making it highly reactive.
Hydrogen has 1 valence electron, whereas helium has 2 valence electrons.
In period two of the periodic table, lithium (Li) has the fewest valence electrons, with only one valence electron. This is characteristic of alkali metals, which are found in group one. As you move across the period, elements gain additional valence electrons, with neon (Ne) having eight.
The period tells you the valence ELECTRON SHELL (energy level). The group tells you the number of valence electrons.
In a period, the number of electron shells increases from left to right across the period, resulting in an increase in energy levels and electron shells. In a family (or group), elements have the same number of electrons in their outermost shell, leading to similar chemical properties. Additionally, elements within the same family tend to have similar valence electron configurations.