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Halogens valence electrons

Octet rule (Section 1.3) When forming compounds, atoms gain, lose, or share electrons so that the number of their valence electrons is the same as that of the nearest noble gas. For the elements carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and the halogens, this number is 8. [Pg.1290]

The number of covalent bonds an atom forms depends on how many additional valence electrons it needs to reach a noble-gas configuration. Hydrogen has one valence electron (Is) and needs one more to reach the helium configuration (Is2), so it forms one bond. Carbon has four valence electrons (2s2 2p2) and needs four more to reach the neon configuration (2s2 2p6), so it forms four bonds. Nitrogen has five valence electrons (2s2 2p3), needs three more, and forms three bonds oxygen has six valence electrons (2s2 2p4), needs two more, and forms two bonds and the halogens have seven valence electrons, need one more, and form one bond. [Pg.9]

Ionization lithium, 267 magnesium, 270 sodium, 270 Ionization energy, 267 alkaline earths, 379 and atomic number, 268 and ihe periodic table, 267 and valence electrons, 269 halogens, 353 measurement of, 268 successive, 269 table of, 268 trends, 268... [Pg.461]

Valence, 286 Valence electrons, 269 and ionization energies, 269 Vanadium atomic radius, 399 eleciron configuration, 389 oxidation numbers, 391 pentoxide catalyst, 227 properties, 400, 401 van der Waals forces, 301 elements that form molecular crystals using, 301 and molecular shape, 307 and molecular size, 307 and molecular substances, 306 and number of electrons, 306 van der Waals radius, 354 halogens, 354 Vanillin, 345... [Pg.466]

Of these, (a), (c), (d), and (e) can all function as greenhouse gases. 2.113 All halogens have an odd number of valence electrons (7). As a consequence interhalogen compounds of the type XX will be extremely reactive radicals unless the total number of halogens is an even number, which can only be achieved if n is odd. Look at IC12 vs. IC13 as examples ... [Pg.990]

Ait four atoms are halogens (Group 17, ), so CIF3 has 28 valence electrons. [Pg.594]

A) Alkali metals have one electron in their outer shell, which is loosely bound. This gives them the largest atomic radii of the elements in their respective periods. Their low ionization energies result in their metallic properties and high reactivities. An alkali metal can easily lose its valence electron to form the univalent cation. Alkali metals have low electronegativities. They react readily with nonmetals, particularly halogens. [Pg.255]

Lewis and many other chemists had recognized the shortcomings of the ionic bond. When diatomic molecules, such as or Cl, were considered, there was no reason why one atom should lose an electron and an identical atom should gain an electron. There had to be another explanation for how diatomic molecules formed. We have seen how the octet rule applies to the formation of ionic compounds by the transfer of electrons. This rule also helps explain the formation of covalent bonds when molecules (covalent compounds) form. Covalent bonds result when atoms share electrons. Using fluorine, F, as a representative halogen, we can see how the octet rule applies to the formation of the molecule. Each fluorine atom has seven valence electrons and needs one more electron to achieve the stable octet valence configuration. If two fluorines share a pair of electrons, then the stable octet configuration is achieved ... [Pg.76]

It will pay you to know (without having to look in the periodic table or tables of electron configurations) that the halogens (F, Cl, Br, I, At) all have seven valence electrons, that the oxygen family (O, S, Se, Te) all have six, that the nitrogen family (N, P, As) have five, that the carbon family (C, Si) have four, and that the boron family (B) have three It will also pay you to know that electronegativities decrease from right to left in a row, or from top to bottom in a column, in the periodic table... [Pg.120]

Group 7A elements (halogens), such as fluorine, have seven valence electrons and form one bond, as in hydrogen fluoride, HF. The fluorine atom in the resultant molecule has one bonding pair of electrons and three lone pairs. [Pg.251]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.240 , Pg.241 , Pg.242 ]




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