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in the series shown below, which of the following has the most unpaired…

Question

in the series shown below, which of the following has the most unpaired electrons? select the single best answer. ar⁺, ar²⁺, ar³⁺, ar

Explanation:

Step1: Determine electron configuration of Ar

Argon (Ar) has an atomic number of 18, so its electron configuration is $1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^6$. All orbitals are fully filled, so unpaired electrons = 0.

Step2: Electron configuration of $\boldsymbol{Ar^+}$

$Ar^+$ loses 1 electron, so electron configuration is $1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^5$. The 3p orbital has 5 electrons (p orbital can hold 6). So unpaired electrons = 1 (since 3p has one unpaired electron: $\uparrow \downarrow, \uparrow \downarrow, \uparrow$).

Step3: Electron configuration of $\boldsymbol{Ar^{2+}}$

$Ar^{2+}$ loses 2 electrons, electron configuration is $1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^4$. The 3p orbital has 4 electrons: $\uparrow \downarrow, \uparrow \downarrow, \uparrow, \uparrow$? Wait, no: p orbitals are three, each can hold 2. So 3p⁴: first two orbitals have 2 (paired), third has 2? No, electron filling follows Hund's rule: fill singly first. So 3p⁴: $\uparrow \downarrow, \uparrow, \uparrow$? Wait, no: 3p has three orbitals. So 4 electrons: first orbital: $\uparrow \downarrow$, second: $\uparrow$, third: $\uparrow$. Wait, no, Hund's rule: electrons fill orbitals singly with parallel spins before pairing. So for 3p⁴: three orbitals, so first three electrons: $\uparrow, \uparrow, \uparrow$ (each in separate orbitals), then the fourth pairs with one: $\uparrow \downarrow, \uparrow, \uparrow$. So unpaired electrons = 2.

Step4: Electron configuration of $\boldsymbol{Ar^{3+}}$

$Ar^{3+}$ loses 3 electrons, electron configuration is $1s^2 2s^2 2p^6 3s^2 3p^3$. The 3p orbital has 3 electrons. By Hund's rule, each of the three p orbitals gets one electron (parallel spins), so unpaired electrons = 3.

Answer:

$Ar^{3+}$ has the most unpaired electrons (3), compared to $Ar$ (0), $Ar^+$ (1), $Ar^{2+}$ (2). So the answer is $Ar^{3+}$.