Na+ ion and neon are isoelectronic.
Na+ and neon are isoelectronic.
Neon has the same electron configuration as Na+ ion
Neon, if you are talking about an oxygen ion.
When fluorine (F) takes an electron from sodium (or from any element in an ionic bonding scenario), the 2p6 sub-orbital is filled, which allows fluorine to achieve the electron configuration of nearby neon (Ne).
Those with full electron "shells" which means that electron pairing is complete and doesn't need a second bonding arrangement. Helium, Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon.
Na+ and neon are isoelectronic.
Na+ and neon are isoelectronic.
Argon
Argon
Neon has the same electron configuration as Na+ ion
what does chlorine have t do to achieve the same electron arrangement as neon
The electron configuration of neon is [He]2s2.2p6.
neon only because sodium loses an electron an its outer shell becomes empty making its configuration the same as neon and fluorine gains an electron making its configuration the same as neon as well.
neon only because sodium loses an electron an its outer shell becomes empty making its configuration the same as neon and fluorine gains an electron making its configuration the same as neon as well.
It has the same electron configuration as in a neon atom.
Sodium would most like be the element with one more electron over neon.
A neutral sodium must lose one electron in order for the resulting sodium ion to have the same electron configuration as an atom of the element neon.