What are valence electrons?

5 Answers
Apr 17, 2014

The valence electrons are the electrons that determine the most typical bonding patterns for an element.

These electrons are found in the s and p orbitals of the highest energy level for the element.

Sodium #1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^1#
Sodium has 1 valence electron from the 3s orbital

Phosphorus #1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^3#
Phosphorus has 5 valence electrons 2 from the 3s and 3 from the 3p

Iron #1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^3 4s^2 3d^6#
Iron has 2 valence electrons from the 4s

Bromine #1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^3 4s^2 3d^10 4p^5#
Bromine has 7 valence electrons 2 from the 4s and 5 from the 4p

Also, valence electrons is the electrons in the out most shell of an atom.
I hope this was helpful.
SMARTERTEACHER

Valence electrons are the outermost electrons and are therefore at the highest energy level.

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Because they are the outermost energy levels, they are available to participate in chemical bonding, either ionic or covalent.

The alkali metals have one valence electron in their highest energy level.

The electron configuration for lithium is #1s^2 2s^1#

Since the highest energy level for lithium is 2 and it contains one electron, the valence number for lithium is one.

Fluorine has a configuration of #1s^2 2s^2 2p^5#.

The highest energy level for fluorine is 2 and this energy, it has 2 electrons in the s orbital and 5 electrons in the p orbital.

The total of valence electrons in the second energy level for this atom is 7 (2+ 5).

It is energetically favorable for lithium to lose one electron which is gained by fluorine.

As a consequence, lithium acquires a + 1 charge, while fluorine acquires a -1 charge.

These ions attract one another and form an ionic bond.

In summary, valence electrons determine the bonding patterns of atoms.

Here is a video which discusses how to draw Lewis structures for atoms showing their number of valence electrons.
Video from: Noel Pauller

Valence electrons are the electrons present in the outermost shell of an atom.

You can easily determine the number of valence electrons an atom can have by looking at its Group in the periodic table.

For example, atoms in Groups 1 and 2 have 1 and 2 valence electrons, respectively.

Atoms in Groups 13 and 18 have 3 and 8 valence electrons, respectively.

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Valence electrons are responsible for the reactivity of an element. They determine how "willing" the elements are to bond with each other to form new compounds. If the valence shell of an element is full, such as with a noble gas, then the element does not want to gain or lose an electron.

For example, alkali metals, which all have a valency of 1, want to lose that one electron and are likely to form ionic bonds (such as in the case of NaCl, or table salt) with a Group 17 element, which has a valency of 7 and wants to gain that one electron from the alkali metal (Group 1 element) to form a stable valency of 8.

For more on valence electrons and how they're related to the periodic table, I strongly recommend this video:

Citations: Tyler Dewitt. (2012, December 18) Valence Electrons and the Periodic Table [Video File].

Nov 13, 2014

Valence electrons are the outermost electrons in any atom. These are the electrons that are available for bonding with other atoms.

The number of valence electrons for a main group (group A) element is the same as the number of electrons in the s and p orbitals in the highest occupied energy level. A short-cut to determining this is to look at the group number on your periodic table.

The Roman numeral at the top of the group will tell you the number of valence electrons. If your periodic table has Arabic numerals for the group numbers, then look at the ones digit of the group number. This will match the number of valence electrons.

Jul 8, 2017

Here's how to count the valence electrons in transition metals.

Explanation:

A valence electron is an electron that is outside a noble-gas core and can be used to form bonds to other atoms.

Thus, the #"d"# electrons in transition metals are valence electrons.

The energy of an #(n-1)"d"# electron is close to that of an #"ns"# electron, so it can participate in bond formation.

However, the farther right an element is in each transition metal series, the closer the #"d"# electron is to the nucleus and the less likely it is that such an electron will behave as a valence electron.

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Thus, in the #"3d"# row, the first four elements (#"Sc, V, Ti, Cr"#) tend to form mainly #"M"^"3+"# ions.

The remaining six elements (#"Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn"#) form mainly #"M"^"2+"# ions.

The situation is even more complicated for the #"4d"# and #"5d"# transition metals.

For example, #"Ni"# has configuration #"[Ar]4s"^2 "3d"^8#.

In principle, it has ten valence electrons.

However, it never uses more than four of them.

It forms compounds like #"NiCl"_2# (2 valence electrons), #"NiCl"_3# (3 valence electrons), and #"K"_2"NiF"_6# (4 valence electrons).

Thus, #"Ni"# has 2, 3, or 4 valence electrons, depending on the particular compound it forms.

However, compounds of #"Ni(II)"# are by far the most common.