QUESTION IMAGE
Question
which is the electron configuration for nobelium (no)?
○ rn7s²5f¹⁴
○ rn7s²5f⁷
○ ne3s²3p⁷
○ xe6s²5d¹
Brief Explanations
- First, determine the atomic number of nobelium (No). Nobelium has an atomic number of 102.
- Radon (Rn) has an atomic number of 86. So, the electron configuration should build on Rn's configuration.
- The remaining electrons after Rn (102 - 86 = 16) are filled in the next orbitals. The order of filling for f - block elements (lanthanides and actinides) involves the 5f orbital after the 7s orbital.
- The 7s orbital can hold 2 electrons, and the 5f orbital can hold up to 14 electrons. For No (atomic number 102), after filling Rn's configuration $[\text{Rn}]$, we fill $7\text{s}^2$ (2 electrons) and then $5\text{f}^{14}$ (14 electrons, since 2 + 14 = 16, which is the number of electrons needed after Rn's 86 electrons to reach 102).
- The other options are incorrect:
- $[\text{Rn}]7\text{s}^25\text{f}^7$ would correspond to an element with fewer electrons (86 + 2+7 = 95, not 102).
- $[\text{Ne}]3\text{s}^23\text{p}^7$ is invalid because the p - orbital can hold a maximum of 6 electrons, and also Ne has atomic number 10, so this would not be for No.
- $[\text{Xe}]6\text{s}^25\text{d}^1$ corresponds to an element with atomic number 54 (Xe) + 2+1 = 57, not 102.
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A. $[\text{Rn}]7\text{s}^25\text{f}^{14}$