In the diagram, how are valence electrons illustrated? How many valence electrons does each element have?

enter image source here

1 Answer
Jul 4, 2017

Well, I would think that the electrons on the outside being DARKER are a good sign that they are important.

And in fact they are; the valence electrons are crucial to effective chemical bonding, and are usually the sole participants in chemical reactions (as opposed to core participation).

Thus, there are #bb4# valence electrons in silicon atom, and #bb5# in phosphorus atom.


For simplicity, you can find valence electrons for main-group elements (i.e. not transition metals and not #f#-block elements) via their group number if it is less than #10#, or their group number minus #10# if the group number is greater than #10#.

http://www.ptable.com/

So, in principle (at least for non-transition metals and non-#f#-block elements), one can easily look across the periodic table and predict that oxygen has #16 - 10 = 6# valence electrons, or boron has #13 - 10 = 3# valence electrons.