valenselektronien
Valenselektronien, commonly known as valence electrons, are the electrons in the outermost electron shell of an atom that participate in chemical bonding and determine most of the atom's chemical properties. They occupy the valence shell, which is the highest principal quantum level that contains electrons for a given atom under ordinary conditions. The number of valence electrons largely determines how an element forms bonds and what oxidation states it can adopt.
Counting valence electrons: For most main-group elements, the valence electron count equals the group number (for
Bonding and properties: Valence electrons determine bonding type—ionic bonds form by transfer of valence electrons, covalent
Examples: Sodium has 1 valence electron; carbon has 4; chlorine has 7; oxygen has 6. Noble gases
Significance: Valence electron configuration explains periodic trends, such as reactivity and bonding patterns, and is essential