Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons.
A nitrogen atom has 5 electrons in its outermost energy level.
Iodine has 7 valence electrons.
The NO- ion would have 11 valence electrons. This is because nitrogen typically has 5 valence electrons and oxygen typically has 6 valence electrons in their neutral states, so NO- would have 5 + 6 = 11 valence electrons.
Nitrogen has 7 electrons.
Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons.
6
2 valance electrons
There are 27 valance electrons.
Nitrogen is a nonmetal with 5 valance electrons, which tends to receive three electrons to complete it outer electron shell.
Nitrogen has 7 electrons, oxygen has 8 electrons, and chlorine has 9 electrons. That is the total electron count, for inner and outer shells. If you are only concerned with the valance electrons, then it is 5 for nitrogen, 6 for oxygen, and 7 for chlorine.
Hydrazine has a total of 14 valence electrons - four from each nitrogen atom and one from each hydrogen atom.
A nitrogen atom has 5 electrons in its outermost energy level.
Iodine has 7 valence electrons.
You mean this form of the electron configuration. [Xe] 4f^14 6s^2 5d^10 6p^3 This is Bismuth and it is in the 5A nitrogen group and it has 5 valance electrons and needs three electrons to complete its valance octet.
Magnesium is group II and has two valance electrons to donate to achieve the octet state. Nitrogen has 5 valance electrons so it accepts 3 into its outer shell to make an octet. So Mg3N2
They have different numbers of valance electrons