Physics, asked by answerhub, 2 months ago

why atom loses electrons from their outer most shell


only right answers otherwise it will be spammed​

Answers

Answered by radhavanshika
2

Answer:

Some atoms have only a few electrons in their outer shell, while some atoms lack only one or two electrons to have an octet. In cases where an atom has three or fewer valence electrons, the atom may lose those valence electrons quite easily until what remains is a lower shell that contains an octet

Answered by ripinpeace
2

Explanation:

Atoms and chemical species lose or gain electrons when they react in order to gain stability. Thus, typically, metals (with nearly empty outer shells) lose electrons to non-metals, thereby forming positive ions. The number of electrons depends on their position on the Periodic table (in simple terms).

Similar questions