NO, IT IS NOT Cs, it is Ca
2006-11-04 11:52:01
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answer #1
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answered by David W 4
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i do no longer remember if it replaced into Bohr or no longer that did the Auf Bua concept yet i think of that must be what you're speaking approximately. With the introduction of quantum concept they think of that an electron could nicely be almost everywhere at one think approximately time - ex: it must be right here or it must be on Mars. regardless of if, the two theories are related interior the certainty they suspect that electrons have distinctive potential ranges and that the valence electrons are the source of molecular bonding. IE: Carbon could have -4 value or a +4 value. Hydrogen has a +a million value on an analogous time as Oxygen has a -2 value. Atoms look happy while the outer potential point is completed. for greater training in this look for suggestion from a periodic table.
2016-10-15 09:30:02
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answer #2
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answered by grabe 4
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Paramagnetic means that it has unpaired electrons. For example, Cs is PARAmagnetic because is valence electrons 6s is full with one electron.
Diamagnetic means that its outer valence shell has NO unpaired electrons as is the case for Ca with two electrons in its 4s orbital.
Using this rule, S is PARAmagnetic and F is DIAmagnetic.
2006-11-04 11:58:51
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answer #3
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answered by pummeloman 2
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Cs
2006-11-04 11:49:29
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answer #4
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answered by 约瑟夫 3
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Pummel has it
HOWEVER, you really can't use electronic configuration to figure it out. You need to draw molecular orbital diagrams for ones like F2 or O2 (the diatomics) to figure it out.
2006-11-04 15:51:38
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answer #5
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answered by niuchemist 6
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F
2006-11-06 14:11:32
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answer #6
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answered by missmidget13 1
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