What Is a Valence Electron? Shells and Bonding
If electrons all look the same, why do chemists obsess over just a handful of them? Because only the outermost ones — the valence electrons — actually do the chemistry. Learn to spot them and you can predict how almost any element will behave. The short answer: a valence electron is an electron in an atom's outermost shell (its highest energy level). These outer electrons are the ones that take part in forming bonds, so they control how an element reacts. What valence electrons actually are Electrons sit in shells around the nucleus, filling from the inside out. For the first 20 elements you can use a simple capacity rule: 1st shell: holds up to 2 electrons 2nd shell: holds up to 8 3rd shell: holds up to 8 (at this level) Whatever electrons end up in the last occupied shell are the valence electrons. The inner electrons are tucked away and shielded; they don't get involved in everyday bonding. The outer ones are exposed — they're what one atom "sees...