Chemistry, asked by Mridu3009, 1 year ago

by bohr and bury theories, the number of electrons in any shell is given by 2n*n where n is the orbital number. then why is the max number of electrons in a shell equal to eight?

Answers

Answered by rajnishyadav59pacy2h
0
It is a law formulated that there can be only 8 electrons in the outermost shell according to the octet rule(except helium which follows the duplet rule). Also, only 8 electrons can be in the penultimate shell
Answered by Neha6400
0
Ok
So ur question is maximum no of electrons
is=2n^2
If this statement is true then 3 rd shell should have 18 electrons but it only have 8.
Every shell has a fixed energy level.Electrons with same energy are placed it that shell.But in a single atom ×>8 electrons having charge same does not exist.Hence they cannot be represented in same shell.
E=2H/npie
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