When they attempt to stabilize themselves. For atoms to be stable they have to have a full outer shell of electrons and so they gain electrons to fill the current outer shell, or lose electrons in order for next shell in (which is full) to be the outer shell.
No! Atoms with more than 4 electrons gain electrons during bonding. Atoms with less than 4 electrons tend to lose electrons during bonding. Hope this helps!
A completely filled shell of electrons has 8 electrons.
No, not all atoms tend to lose electrons. Atoms can gain, lose, or share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration. The tendency to lose or gain electrons depends on factors such as the number of valence electrons and the element's position on the periodic table.
Alkali metals tend to lose electrons in chemical reactions.
It will gain an electron so that it can complete a full outer shell of 8 electrons.
Choices: a) eject, retain B) lose, gain c) retain,gain d) gain, lose e) lose, retain
se and sometimes gain electrons. Atoms with eight valence electrons do not easily lose electrons
Atoms with eight valence electrons usually do not gain or lose electrons. Atoms with one, two, or three valence electrons will lose electrons.
No! Atoms with more than 4 electrons gain electrons during bonding. Atoms with less than 4 electrons tend to lose electrons during bonding. Hope this helps!
A completely filled shell of electrons has 8 electrons.
se and sometimes gain electrons. Atoms with eight valence electrons do not easily lose electrons
Metals lose electrons.
Atoms of metallic elements tend to lose electrons to form positively charged ions. This is because metallic elements have few electrons in their outer shells, making it easier for them to lose electrons and achieve a stable electron configuration.
Atoms lose or gain or share electrons and tend to attain noble gas configuration
Atoms that tend to gain electrons are located on the far left side of the periodic table.
The most stable electron configuration for any atom is to have a complete outer shell. For the smallest atoms, that can be no electrons at all (for H+) since no shell is equivalent to a complete shell, or just two electrons in the outer shell, such as for a helium atom, but for most elements that means 8 electrons in the outer shell. We then have atoms which have five or more electrons in their outer shell and therefore need three or less to complete their shell, and they tend to gain electrons because it is easier to gain three than it is to lose five. Similarly, there are atoms with three or fewer electrons in their outer shell, and they tend to lose electrons because it is easier to lose three than it is to gain five. In the middle we have an atom such as carbon, with four electrons it its outer shell; it can gain or lose electrons with equal ease.
Atoms gain or lose electrons during ionic bonding to achieve a stable outer electron configuration resembling that of a noble gas. Atoms with few valence electrons tend to lose electrons to attain a full outer shell, while those with almost full shells tend to gain electrons. This transfer allows atoms to achieve a more stable electronic configuration.