Helium, like all the noble gases, has a stable electron configuration with a full outer shell (and since helium is a very small atom, with only hydrogen being smaller, it takes only 2 electrons to fill its outer shell; larger atoms require 8). All chemical reactions are driven by the shifting of electrons in order to create more stable arrangements, so if the arrangement is already stable, no shifting is needed and no chemical reactions will happen.
Hydrogen is not a noble gas.
The noble gas configuration of hydrogen is 1s1, as it has one electron in its outer shell. Hydrogen can achieve stability by gaining or losing one electron to have a full valence shell like the noble gas helium.
Full form: 1s1. it doesn't have noble gas configuration as there is no noble gas before hydrogen
There is no boble gas notation for hydrogen and helium. The noble gas notation starts for elements after helium. The noble gas notation is a notation formed as a result of the electron configuration notation being used in conjunction with noble gases. The noble gas preceding the element in question is written then the electron configuration is continued from that point forward.
An example of a gas element is helium, which is a noble gas commonly used in party balloons and airships.
Hydrogen is not a noble gas.
The noble gas configuration of hydrogen is 1s1, as it has one electron in its outer shell. Hydrogen can achieve stability by gaining or losing one electron to have a full valence shell like the noble gas helium.
Full form: 1s1. it doesn't have noble gas configuration as there is no noble gas before hydrogen
helium is a noble gas
Only krypton (Kr) is a noble gas.
There is no boble gas notation for hydrogen and helium. The noble gas notation starts for elements after helium. The noble gas notation is a notation formed as a result of the electron configuration notation being used in conjunction with noble gases. The noble gas preceding the element in question is written then the electron configuration is continued from that point forward.
In a molecule of hydrogen chloride (HCl), the hydrogen atom attains a noble gas electron structure by sharing its electron with the chlorine atom, which attains a noble gas structure through the addition of the shared electron. The resulting electron structure mimics that of a noble gas (helium for hydrogen and argon for chlorine), fulfilling the octet rule for both atoms.
No. Neon is a noble gas and does not form compounds.
hydrogen is a gas so i would assume it belongs to the gas element family or maybe the noble gasses hope this helps
An example of a gas element is helium, which is a noble gas commonly used in party balloons and airships.
The noble gas shorthand for titanium is [Ar] 3d^2 4s^2. It represents the electron configuration of titanium by showing the number of electrons in each energy level, similar to the configuration of the noble gas element argon.
Hydrogen is odd one as it is in group 1. The other elements are in group 18 (noble gases).