Re: HSC Chemistry Marathon 2016
Electrons are negative, protons are positive. So if its net charge is 3-, it's 3 negative, and what is negative? Electrons are negative, so it must have more electrons than protons to give it a negative charge.
yeh this
basically in a neutral atom the number of ur protons = ur electrons. in a charged electron the number of ur protons =/= electrons. if it's a positive charge, u have more protons cuz protons are positive. if its a neg charge, u have more electrons cuz electrons r negative (they have neg charge).
neutrons just hold the nucleus together -> like if u think about it, like charges repel and opposite charges attract right? there isn't any electrons in the nucleus - nucleus only has protons and neutrons. theoretically protons should repel other protons (cuz like charges repel) but they don't cuz of the neutrons. ur number of neutrons can be found by minusing atomic number from atomic weight.
In hsc chem from memory u don't really deal with neutrons other than isotopes
net charges dont affect the number of ur protons because any element only ever has a set numer of protons. if u change the number of protons, ur making it into another element. e.g a neutral hydrogen has 1 proton and 1 electron. if u add a proton somehow, ur making it into Helium+ (He+) which has 2 protons and 1 electron. Net charges only affect number of electrons -> ur not changing number of neutrons or protons.