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∙ 7y agoPhosphorus need 3 electrons to complete its octet.
Wiki User
∙ 7y agoPhosphorus has 5 valence electrons and it needs 3 more electrons to complete its octet and achieve stability.
This atom must gain 3 electrons to achieve an octet.
It is necessary to gain/lose electrons.
Carbon does not gain or lose 4 electrons to complete its octet because it only has 4 valence electrons to begin with. To complete its octet, carbon forms covalent bonds by sharing electrons with other atoms to achieve stability due to its electronic configuration.
The optimum number of electrons for phosphorus to possess in its outermost shell is 8 electrons, following the octet rule. This means phosphorus will typically either gain 3 electrons or lose 5 electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
No, phosphorus does not have a complete outer shell. It has five valence electrons in its outer shell and typically forms compounds to complete its octet.
yes PCl3 obey octet rule there are 5 electrons in the valence shell of phosphorous it need 3 electron to complete its octet so it form bond with 3 chlorine after bond formation there are 8 electron in its octet it obey octet rule
Yes, PF5 is an exception to the Lewis octet rule. Phosphorus has 10 electrons around it in PF5, exceeding the octet rule. This is due to the availability of d-orbitals in the valence shell of phosphorus for accommodating extra electrons.
This atom must gain 3 electrons to achieve an octet.
eight. it is important to obtain octet so that elements become stable.
The valency of phosphorus is typically 5 because it has 5 electrons in its outermost shell. Phosphorus tends to form compounds by sharing these 5 electrons with other atoms to achieve a stable octet configuration.
It is necessary to gain/lose electrons.
Yes, neutral unbonded atoms can complete a valence octet by gaining or losing electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration with 8 valence electrons. This stability is known as the octet rule, which applies to many elements in the periodic table.
Octet Rule: In order for atoms to become more stable, they will take electrons, lose electrons, or share electrons so that their outer shell/level will contain eight electrons and be complete.
Phosphorus can form 3 bonds in PH3 and PCl3 because it has 5 valence electrons in the outer shell. By forming 3 covalent bonds, phosphorus completes its octet and achieves stability. This allows phosphorus to satisfy the octet rule and form a stable molecule.
A carbon atom completes its octet by forming four covalent bonds with other atoms, sharing electrons from its outer shell. This allows the carbon atom to reach a stable electron configuration similar to noble gases.
Carbon does not gain or lose 4 electrons to complete its octet because it only has 4 valence electrons to begin with. To complete its octet, carbon forms covalent bonds by sharing electrons with other atoms to achieve stability due to its electronic configuration.