Solution:
The previous noble gas is argon (Ar) at the end of the third row.
Its unchanging inner core will be present in all fourth-row atoms:
Ar:
Beyond this core, the filling diagram shows that iron will have
two electrons in the 4s orbital and six elecrtons in the 3d oorbitals:
Fe:
The transition metals and inner transition metals sometimes deviate
from this ideal filling scheme, by dropping one electron from the
outer s orbital into the nearby d orbitals, or from
the outermost d orbitals to an f orbital. This arises
because half-filled shells, d
and f ,
with one electron in each orbital, or filled d
and f
shells, are especially stable. If an atom is one electron short
of these states, that is, d,
f,
d,
or f,
it can steal an electron from a nearby level and achieve the more
stable arrangement. This is possible only because the s,
d, and f orbitals have very nearly the same energy,
particularly in later rows. Hence chromium (Cr) has the structure
[Ar] 3d
4s
instead of [Ar] 3d
4s,
as would be expected from its place in the table, and gold (Au)
has the structure [Xe] 4f
5d
6s,
rather than [Xe] 4f
5d
6s.
These minor irregularities are not nearly as important as is the
understanding of the overall pattern of electron filling, and how
it can be obtained from the table.