Chemistry, asked by nishaagarwalu4940, 11 months ago

As the bond order increases, how does the bond length change?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

\huge\mathfrak\red{HeyAa..!}

The higher the bond order, the stronger the pull between the two atoms and the shorter the bond length. Generally, the length of the bond between two atoms is approximately the sum of the covalent radii of the two atoms, X + Y. ... Bonds do not break and form spontaneously-an energy change is required.

Answered by Anonymous
0

❤❤Holå mate❤❤

✍✍ANSWER✍✍

✨✨The higher the bond order, the stronger the pull between the two atoms and the shorter the bond length. Generally, the length of the bond between two atoms is approximately the sum of the covalent radii of the two atoms, X + Y. ... Bonds do not break and form spontaneously-an energy change is required.✨✨

✌høpe it's help you✌

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