Hi!
I have just started chem at school and have a couple of questions for the bright minds over here on the forums.
1)
With the Nobel gasses, continually i see on the internet that the reason they are inert is due to the outer shell being full. But i don't see how this is true. I was taught that the shells have the following maximum capacities:
2,8,18,32,50,72
So Helium & Neon are both at maximum capacity (with 2 and 2,8) but argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon and Ununoctium are all not. They all have 8 electrons on the outer shell but these shells are above the second energy level maximum. Hmm, i don't think i articulated that very well. Let me try again:
if the maximums are:
2,8,18,32,50,72
Helium:
2
makes sense
Neon:
2,8
makes sense
Argon:
2,8,8
WOW! Why is the final layer an 8? For the outer layer to be at max capacity should it not be 18?
Krypton:
2,8,18,8
WOW! Why is the final layer an 8? For the outer layer to be at max capacity should it not be 32?
so i think you get my point there. Where is the final layer less than the maximum capacity despite a bunch of resources saying that Nobel gasses are inert due to the outer layer being at maximum capacity.
2)
I was told that the electrons flow on from layer to layer. So if there was 10 electrons then layer 1 fills to two, layer 2 fills to 8. That makes sense for Helium, Neon, Argon & Krypton. But then we get to Xenon where the shells go:
2,8,18, 18, 8
WOW! Why didn't layer 4 fill to 32 rather than 18, so the electron arrangement would be:
2,8,18,26
This confusion applies to Xenon, Radon and Ununoctium!
I thought i was getting the hang of chem but now it seems that these elements simply break the laws!
I would be so pleased if someone could give me a hand here.