Chemistry, asked by cr79949, 4 months ago

define the term electrophile and homolytic fission​

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Answered by Anonymous
0

here's ur answer dude

Homolytic fission of a covalent bond leads to the formation of: (A) Electrophile. ... Hint: Homolytic fission: It is defined as the cleavage in which a covalent bond breaks in such a way that each atom takes away one electron of the shared pair. They contain an unpaired electron.

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Answered by bgdas2020
2

Answer:

Electrophile-Electrophile, in chemistry, an atom or a molecule that in chemical reaction seeks an atom or molecule containing an electron pair available for bonding. Electrophilic substances are Lewis acids (compounds that accept electron pairs), and many of them are Brønsted acids (compounds that donate protons).

Homolytic fission-Homolytic fission occurs when the covalent bond breaks evenly, and each of the bonded atoms takes one of the shared pair of electrons from the bond. ... The atom that takes both electrons becomes a negative ion (anion). The atom that does not take the electrons becomes a positive ion (cation).

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