The noble gas (electron) configuration is a scheme for writing the electron configurations of elements in a kind of "shorthand" so it is easier to write them. For potassium element - not ion , [Ar] 4s1 is the way it is written in noble gas configuration. If we could not use this shorthand and had to write out the electron configuration completely, it would like this:
1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s1
Wikipedia has other information on potassium, and a link is provided.
For Sodium it is [Ne]3s1 and thus for sodium ion it is just [Ne]
A noble gas electron configuration involves representing an element's electron configuration by using the electron configuration of the nearest noble gas preceding it in the periodic table, followed by the remaining electron configuration for that element. For example, the noble gas electron configuration for sodium (Na) is [Ne] 3sยน, where [Ne] represents the electron configuration of neon leading up to sodium.
The noble gas configuration of sodium is [Ne]3s^1. This means that it has the same electron configuration as neon except for one additional electron in the 3s orbital. Sodium typically loses this electron to achieve a stable octet configuration.
The noble gas electron configuration of sodium fluoride is [Ne]3s^1 3p^5. This means that it has the same electron configuration as neon, with an additional 3s^1 electron from sodium and a 3p^5 electron from fluorine.
Sodium's noble gas configuration is [Ne]3s1, which means it has the same electron configuration as neon up to the 3s orbital, and then has one additional electron in the 3s orbital.
The noble gas configuration of a sodium ion (Na+) is the same as that of neon. This means that the electron configuration of sodium ion is [Ne] where [Ne] represents the electron configuration of neon.
A noble gas electron configuration involves representing an element's electron configuration by using the electron configuration of the nearest noble gas preceding it in the periodic table, followed by the remaining electron configuration for that element. For example, the noble gas electron configuration for sodium (Na) is [Ne] 3sยน, where [Ne] represents the electron configuration of neon leading up to sodium.
The noble gas configuration of sodium is [Ne]3s^1. This means that it has the same electron configuration as neon except for one additional electron in the 3s orbital. Sodium typically loses this electron to achieve a stable octet configuration.
The ion formed when sodium achieves a noble-gas electronic configuration is Na+. This means that sodium has lost one electron to achieve the same electron configuration as neon, a noble gas, which has a stable electron configuration.
The noble gas electron configuration of sodium fluoride is [Ne]3s^1 3p^5. This means that it has the same electron configuration as neon, with an additional 3s^1 electron from sodium and a 3p^5 electron from fluorine.
Chlorine will have a noble gas configuration by accepting one electron from a sodium atom to form an ionic bond. This results in chlorine gaining a full outer electron shell, similar to the noble gas configuration of argon.
Sodium's noble gas configuration is [Ne]3s1, which means it has the same electron configuration as neon up to the 3s orbital, and then has one additional electron in the 3s orbital.
The "Noble gas electron configuration," or the condensed electron configuration, for F is [He] 2s2 3p5.
The noble gas configuration of a sodium ion (Na+) is the same as that of neon. This means that the electron configuration of sodium ion is [Ne] where [Ne] represents the electron configuration of neon.
Yes, when a sodium atom reacts with a chlorine atom to form a compound (sodium chloride), the sodium atom loses an electron to form a sodium ion with the same electron configuration as neon, while the chlorine atom gains an electron to form a chloride ion with the same electron configuration as argon. This stable electron configuration is achieved by attaining a full outer shell of electrons, similar to noble gas atoms.
The stable electron arrangement of sodium after the 3s sublevel electrons have been removed is the noble gas configuration of neon. Sodium loses one electron to achieve a full outer shell, similar to the electron configuration of the nearest noble gas element.
Sulfur must lose six electrons to attain noble gas electron configuration (in SO3, H2SO4 etc) but in most of the compounds it will exist as sulphides which is formed when sulphur will gain two electrons.
The element with the noble-gas configuration Ne 3s2 is sodium (Na). Sodium has an electron configuration of 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s1, but when it loses one electron, it attains the stable electron configuration of neon by having 2 electrons in the 3s orbital.