Chemistry, asked by kalas50, 8 months ago

explain octet rule hibridisation long pair​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4

Explanation:

Lone pairs are electron groups which counts towards hybridization. Lone pairs count as one electron group towards total hybridization. Oxygen has two lone pairs. Along with the two bonded atoms, the hydrogen's, the central atom has a total of four electron groups, giving the central atom an sp3 hybridization.

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Answered by morekiranm77
0

Answer:

The octet rule is a chemical rule of thumb that reflects the observation that main group elements tend to bond in such a way that each atom has eight electrons in its valence shell, giving it the same electronic configuration as a noble gas. The rule is especially applicable to carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and the halogens, but also to metals such as sodium or magnesium.

The valence electrons can be counted using a Lewis electron dot diagram as shown at the right for carbon dioxide. The electrons shared by the two atoms in a covalent bond are counted twice, once for each atom. In carbon dioxide each oxygen shares four electrons with the central carbon, two (shown in red) from the oxygen itself and two (shown in black) from the carbon. All four of these electrons are counted in both the carbon octet and the oxygen octet.

Example: sodium chloride (NaCl)

History

Explanation in quantum theory

Exceptions

Three-electron bonds

Hypervalent molecules

Other rules

See also

References

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