Chemistry, asked by porwalabhi1630, 11 months ago

If an element has two electrons in its outermost shell then it is likely to be metallic

Answers

Answered by farahalrafeeq
26

Yes this is true because metals are usually positively charged...and atoms with two electrons become positively charged.....

Hope it is helpful...


farahalrafeeq: It was a pleasure helping you...
Answered by OlaMacgregor
9

The statement, if an element has two electrons in its outermost shell then it is likely to be metallic, is true.

Explanation:

  • A neutral element which contains only two electrons in its outermost shell is most likely to be a group 2 element. This is because all the elements in a group in periodic table are placed according to the number of electrons present in their outermost shell.
  • So, most likely an element with 2 valence electrons will lose its valence electrons in order to attain stability. Any element that lose its electrons to attain stability forms a positive ions.
  • Therefore, it will be metallic in nature because only metals have the ability to form positive ions.

Learn more about metal ions:

https://brainly.in/question/5918610

https://brainly.in/question/6372629

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