Chemistry, asked by abdullahansari5, 11 months ago

explain effective nuclear charge and screening​

Answers

Answered by Zisha7
2

Answer:

The shielding effect describes the balance between the pull of the protons on valence electrons and the repulsion forces from inner electrons. ... The effective nuclear charge is the net positive charge experienced by valence electrons.

Answered by Anonymous
7

Answer:

(i) Screening effect : The inner shell electrons in an atom screen or shield the outermost valence electrons from the nuclear attraction. This effect is called screening effect or shielding effect. The magnitude of screening effect depends upon the number of inner electrons. Higher the number of inner electrons, greater is the value of screening effect. The screening constant is represented by 'o' (sigma). For example, across a period the electrons enter the same shell. Thus, shielding due to inner electrons remain same. Down a group, a new larger valence shell is added which increases the inner electrons and thus the shielding effect increases

(ii) Effective nuclear charge : Due to screening effect the valency electrons experience less attraction towards nucleus. This reduces the active nuclear charge (z) actually present on the nucleus. This reduced nuclear charge is termed as 'effective nuclear charge. (Z_eff).

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