Lithium is in group 1 of the Periodic How_many_electrons_must_the_lithium_atom_give_up_to_become_stable, so it must lose one electron for it to attain a full outermost energy level and become stable.
The charge will then be positive (+).
Lithium must lose one electron to attain noble gas electron configuration.
Magnesium must lose two electrons.
Its outer shell needs 3 more electrons (because 2+3=5) you need 8 in order for the outer shell to become stable being that there is 5 on the outer shell already what plus 5 gives you 8 3 of course so that why you add 3.
Because Lithium is in Group 1 on the Periodic Table, it is an Alkali Metal. It has 1 electron on it's outer shell. Therefore, it is unstable because it does not have a full outer shell of electrons. A full outer shell contains 2 electrons, then 8 on the next shell, and then 8 again on the one after, etc.
AnswerLithium has 9 isotopes. 2 isotopes are stable and 7 are radioactive.Lithium has 9 isotopes. 2 isotopes are stable and 7 are radioactive.
lithium donates the electron in its outer orbital to fluorine which then has a completed outer shell
3
They achieve stable configuration by sharing their electrons in their outermost shell.
To achieve octet configuration (stable)
A stable electron configuration.
Oxygen atoms need to share or gain two electrons in order to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Atoms become ions by gaining or losing electrons to achieve a noble gas configuration of electrons, which is stable. Argon already has such a configuration and is very stable as it is. Any gain or loss of electrons would make it less stable.
Only three electrons.
Atoms are trying achieve a stable electronic configuration i.e., stable arrangement of electrons in their electron shells. All configurations are not stable. Mostly stable configuration is attained by forming an octet of electrons in outer most shell. Sometimes octet rule is violated also.
Lithium(Li) gains 1 electron to become stable.
The atoms of the molecule effectively achieve a noble gas configuration by sharing valence electrons.
. Through the transfer of electrons between atoms
Sharing of electrons by molecules is necessary because it helps them achieve stability by achieving stable electronic configuration.
Neon is already a stable element with a full outer electron shell, so it does not need to gain any electrons to achieve stability. Neon has 10 electrons in total, with a full valence shell of 8 electrons. Therefore, it is already in a stable configuration.