Chemistry, asked by naimmemon168gmail, 7 months ago

explain nucleophike and electrophile​

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Answered by sonubharti367
0

Answer:

A Nucleophile Is A Reactant That Provides A Pair Of Electrons To Form A New Covalent Bond. An Electrophile Is A Reactant That Accepts A Pair Of Electrons To Form A New Covalent Bond. Nucleophilicity” And “Electrophilicity” Refer To The Extent To Which A Species Can Donate Or Accept A Pair Of Electrons.

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Answered by Anonymous
14
  • An electrophile is a molecule that forms a bond to its reaction partner (the nucleophile) by accepting both bonding electrons from that reaction partner. Electrophilic reagents are Lewis acids.
  • Electrophiles are electron deficient species and can accept an electron pair from electron rich species.Examples include carbocations and carbonyl compounds. A nucleophile is electron rich species and donates electron pairs to electron deficient species. Examples include carbanions, water , ammonia, cyanide ion etc.

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