Chemistry, asked by haseve1694, 2 months ago

distinguished between Electropile and nucleopile​

Answers

Answered by rai2006
0

Answer:

Electrophiles are electron acceptors while nucleophiles are electron donors. Electrophiles accept electrons because they are either positively charged or they have empty valence shells.

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Electrophile and nucleophile are the chemical species that donate or accept electrons to form a new chemical bond. A nucleophile is a chemical species which, in relation to a response, gives an electron pair to form a chemical bond. Any molecule, ion or atom that is in some manner deficient in electron can act as an electrophile.

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Nucleophile

A nucleophile is a reagent comprising an unparalleled or lone electron pair atom. As a nucleophile is wealthy in electron, it looks for deficient electron locations, i.e. nucleus means loving nucleus. Nucleophiles act as Lewis bases, according to Lewis ‘ notion of acids and bases.

A nucleophile is usually charged negatively or neutral with a lone couple of donable electrons. H2O, -OMe or -OtBu are some examples. Overall, the electron-rich is a nucleophile

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Electropile

Positively loaded or neutral species are called electrophiles that are deficient in electrons and can accept a couple of electrons. These are also called species that love electron (philic).

Electrophiles are generally charged positively or are neutral species with empty orbitals attracted to a centre wealthy in electrons.

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