Helium atoms are chemically unreactive because

a

there are no electrons around the nucleus

b

the number of protons equals the number of electrons

c

there are equal number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus

d

the outer electron shell is completely filled

e

the atoms contain only protons

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Discussions (5)

Dave333
4 years ago

If we look at the electron configurations, we see that helium (atomic number 2) has a full shell of two s electrons. Since there are no electrons shielding this shell from the nucleus, these two electrons will be very difficult to remove, making helium unreactive.

Dave333
4 years ago

Answer:Helium is one of noble gases in group 8 of the Periodic Table. ... The proton number of helium is two, so a helium atom has two electrons, which exist in the 1s shell. It doesn't to gain or lose electrons to fill thus shell and is unreactive.

Dave333
4 years ago

Helium has a complete shell of electrons, and in this form the atom does not readily accept any extra electrons nor join with anything to make covalent compounds.

IBSalman
7 years ago

Correct

Ohajuru
6 years ago

Helium is an unreactive noble gas.

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