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  2. Electron shell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_shell

    For example, the first (K) shell has one subshell, called 1s; the second (L) shell has two subshells, called 2s and 2p; the third shell has 3s, 3p, and 3d; the fourth shell has 4s, 4p, 4d and 4f; the fifth shell has 5s, 5p, 5d, and 5f and can theoretically hold more in the 5g subshell that is not occupied in the ground-state electron ...

  3. Aufbau principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aufbau_principle

    The general idea that after the two 8s elements, there come regions of chemical activity of 5g, followed by 6f, followed by 7d, and then 8p, does however mostly seem to hold true, except that relativity "splits" the 8p shell into a stabilized part (8p 1/2, which acts like an extra covering shell together with 8s and is slowly drowned into the ...

  4. Electron configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_configuration

    Pauli was able to reproduce Stoner's shell structure, but with the correct structure of subshells, by his inclusion of a fourth quantum number and his exclusion principle (1925): [11] It should be forbidden for more than one electron with the same value of the main quantum number n to have the same value for the other three quantum numbers k ...

  5. Electron configurations of the elements (data page) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_configurations_of...

    For each atom the subshells are given first in concise form, then with all subshells written out, followed by the number of electrons per shell. For phosphorus (element 15) as an example, the concise form is [Ne] 3s 2 3p 3.

  6. Valence electron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valence_electron

    Four covalent bonds.Carbon has four valence electrons and here a valence of four. Each hydrogen atom has one valence electron and is univalent. In chemistry and physics, valence electrons are electrons in the outermost shell of an atom, and that can participate in the formation of a chemical bond if the outermost shell is not closed.

  7. Wikipedia : Featured picture candidates/Electron shells

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Electron_shells

    Electron shells are made up of one or more electron subshells, or sublevels, which have two or more orbitals with the same angular momentum quantum number l. Electron shells make up the electron configuration of an atom. It can be shown that the number of electrons that can reside in a shell is equal to .

  8. Electron spectroscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_spectroscopy

    If an electron from a shell with a higher energy level jumps to fill the hole, the energy difference can be emitted as a fluorescent photon (figure 1 (b)). In the Auger phenomenon, when the electron jumps from the higher energy level, its energy instead causes an adjacent or nearby electron to be ejected, forming an Auger electron (figure 1 (c)).

  9. Octet rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octet_rule

    The bonding in carbon dioxide (CO 2): all atoms are surrounded by 8 electrons, fulfilling the octet rule.. The octet rule is a chemical rule of thumb that reflects the theory that main-group elements tend to bond in such a way that each atom has eight electrons in its valence shell, giving it the same electronic configuration as a noble gas.