Chemistry, asked by parv71204, 7 months ago

what is succesive ionisation energy?​

Answers

Answered by patelpritesh
1

Answer:

It is the energy needed to remove a second electron from each ion in 1 mole of gaseous 1+ ions to give gaseous 2+ ions. More ionisation energies. You can then have as many successive ionisation energies as there are electrons in the original atom.

Answered by abhisingh2652
1

Explanation:

It is the energy needed to remove a second electron from each ion in 1 mole of gaseous 1+ ions to give gaseous 2+ ions. More ionisation energies. You can then have as many successive ionisation energies as there are electrons in the original atom.

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