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How does an ion of sodium differ from an atom of sodium?

User Nowk
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2 Answers

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Answer: Na+1 —> it has 1 outer valence electrons that was lost to a nonmetal

O-2 —> oxygen needs 2 more electrons to be stable

Step-by-step explanation:

User Twils
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An atoms is element that doesn’t have charge because it hasn’t lost or gained any electrons. An ion is element that has a charge, indicating either + / - charge along with the number of electrons its has gained or lost.
Example:
Na+1 —> because it’s had 1 outer valence electrons that was lost to a nonmetal
O-2 —> oxygen need 2 more electrons to be stable. (8 outer valence electrons)
User MrRoman
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