Chlorine has: 17 Protons 17 Electrons (in a neutral atom i.e. not an ion) (Isotope Mass Number - 17) is the number of Neutrons.
The Cl-1 ion is called chloride ion.
The atom chlorine usually has 17 protons and 17 electrons. However, the ion Cl-1 indicates that it has gained one electron, so it now has 17 protons and 18 electrons.
No, Cl is not a positively charged ion. Cl is the chemical symbol for chlorine, which typically forms a negatively charged ion called chloride (Cl-).
In NaCl, there are sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-). Sodium ion has a positive charge, while chloride ion has a negative charge.
The ion formula for chloride is Cl-.
The formula for the chloride ion is 'Cl^-' sometimes written as 'Cl-'
Protons = 17, electrons = 18There are two isotopes differing in neutron number only :Cl-35 (75%) having 35-17= 18 neutronsCl-37 (25%) having 37-17= 20 neutrons
The symbol for the chloride ion is Cl-.
the chloride ION is negatively charged (Cl-) And since electron is negative, and protons are positive, it needs more electrons for the ion to be negatively charged.That's how you get the answer! ;)
The ion with 17 protons, 18 neutrons, and 18 electrons is the chlorine ion, Cl^- (chloride ion). It has gained an extra electron to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Chlorine has: 17 Protons 17 Electrons (in a neutral atom i.e. not an ion) (Isotope Mass Number - 17) is the number of Neutrons.
A chloride ion has gained one electron to become a Cl- ion, making it uncharged overall but with 18 electrons to match the 17 protons in its nucleus.
A chloride ion (Cl-) has the same number of electrons as a neutral atom of chlorine (Cl). The neutral chlorine atom has 17 electrons, and when it gains one electron to form the chloride ion, it also has 17 electrons but with a 1- charge.
The Cl-1 ion is called chloride ion.
chloride
The symbol used to represent the chloride ion is Cl-. It indicates that the ion has a negative charge due to an extra electron.