Titanium SPDF Electron Configuration Explained
Titanium has atomic number 22, meaning it has 22 electrons to arrange across its orbitals. Its ground-state electron configuration is:
Full notation: `1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d² 4s²`
Shorthand notation: `[Ar] 3d² 4s²`
This configuration places Titanium in the D-block of the periodic table — Period 4, Group 4. The last subshell filled (the d subshell) determines its block.
SPDF notation tells you exactly: which subshell each electron occupies, how many electrons are in it, and the energy level of each group. This is far more detail than the simpler Bohr model, which only shows shell totals.
Aufbau Filling Sequence for Titanium
The Aufbau (building-up) principle states electrons fill the lowest available energy subshell first. For Titanium (Z=22), the filling stops at the 4s² subshell.
Standard Aufbau sequence:
1s → 2s → 2p → 3s → 3p → 4s → 3d → 4p → 5s → 4d → 5p → 6s → 4f → 5d → 6p → 7s → 5f → 6d → 7p
After filling, Titanium's configuration ends at 1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d² 4s², with 4 valence electrons in its outermost subshell. Note: Titanium is a D-block element, so watch for possible Aufbau anomalies driven by extra stability of half-filled or fully-filled d subshells.
Orbital Diagram of Titanium (s, p, d, f)
The orbital diagram of Titanium expands the configuration 1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d² 4s² into individual orbital boxes:
- Each s subshell holds max 2 electrons (1 orbital)
- Each p subshell holds max 6 electrons (3 orbitals)
- Each d subshell holds max 10 electrons (5 orbitals)
- Each f subshell holds max 14 electrons (7 orbitals)
Hund's Rule dictates that within any subshell, electrons fill each orbital singly (spin up ↑) before pairing. This avoids electron–electron repulsion. Titanium's D-block placement confirms its last orbitals are d type.
The interactive diagram above shows Titanium's complete subshell breakdown with orbital boxes for every energy level.
How to Write Titanium's Electron Configuration
Follow these steps to write Titanium's electron configuration from scratch:
Step 1: Identify the atomic number: Z = 22 — this is the total number of electrons to place.
Step 2: Follow the Aufbau sequence, filling the lowest energy subshells first:
> 1s → 2s → 2p → 3s → 3p → 4s → 3d → 4p → ...
Step 3: Apply Hund's Rule inside each subshell — one electron per orbital before pairing begins.
Step 4: Apply the Pauli Exclusion Principle — each orbital holds at most 2 electrons with opposite spins.
Step 5: After filling all 22 electrons, your result should match:
> 1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d² 4s²
Shorthand: Replace the preceding noble gas core with its symbol:
> [Ar] 3d² 4s²
⚠️ Common mistake: Titanium is a d-block element. Verify your d-subshell count carefully — anomalies from expected Aufbau order are possible.
Why Titanium Matters (Real-World Insight)
🔬 Element Comparison
Titanium vs Vanadium — Key Differences
Although Titanium (Z=22) and Vanadium (Z=23) are adjacent on the periodic table, they behave very differently. Titanium has 4 valence electrons vs Vanadium's 5. Their electronegativity gap is 0.09 — a critical factor in predicting bond polarity when the two interact.
Valence Electrons & D-Block Position
Titanium has 4 valence electrons — the electrons in its highest occupied principal energy level.
As a D-block element, Titanium's valence electrons reside in d orbitals and d/f orbitals. These are the only electrons involved in chemical bonding.
| Block | Type | Max Valence e⁻ |
|---|---|---|
| s-block | Groups 1–2 | 1–2 |
| p-block | Groups 13–18 | 3–8 |
| d-block | Groups 3–12 | up to 10 |
| f-block | Lanthanides/Actinides | up to 14 |
Titanium sits in this table as a d-block element with 4 valence electrons.
→ See Titanium's valence electrons in the Bohr model for the shell-based view.
→ Electronegativity of Titanium — how strongly it attracts these electrons.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. How many electrons does Titanium have?
Titanium has 22 electrons, matching its atomic number. In a neutral atom, these are balanced by 22 protons in the nucleus.
Q. What is the shell structure of Titanium?
The electron shell distribution for Titanium is 2, 8, 10, 2. This shows how all 22 electrons are arranged across 4 principal energy levels.
Q. How many valence electrons does Titanium have?
Titanium has 4 valence electrons in its outermost shell. These are responsible for its chemical bonding and placement in Group 4.
Q. What is the SPDF configuration of Titanium?
The full configuration is 1s² 2s² 2p⁶ 3s² 3p⁶ 3d² 4s². This describes the exact subshell occupancy following the Aufbau principle.
Q. What block is Titanium in?
Titanium is in the D-block because its highest-energy electrons occupy d orbitals.

