Chemistry, asked by misscara2005, 11 months ago

When bonding occurs, only the outer shell electrons are involved. Explain why electrons in the inner shells do not normally form bonds when atoms combine.

Answers

Answered by lovlyzarah
1

Answer:

Explanation:

In most cases, in order to fill the outermost orbital, the electrons within it form covalent bonds with other atoms. A covalent bond thus holds two atoms close together because electrons in their outermost orbitals are shared by both atoms.

Similar questions