Chemistry, asked by satyamagarwal3430, 11 months ago

How can the two fluorine atoms attain an octet arrangements

Answers

Answered by Itscuteequeen
2

&lt;!DOCTYPE html&gt;</p><p>&lt;html&gt;</p><p>&lt;head&gt;</p><p>&lt;style&gt;</p><p>#grad1 {</p><p>height: 300px;</p><p>background-color: red; /* For browsers that do not</p><p>support gradients */</p><p>background-image: linear-gradient(to right,</p><p>blue ,red,pink,orange); /* Standard syntax (must be last)</p><p>*/</p><p>&lt;/style&gt;</p><p>&lt;/head&gt;</p><p>&lt;body&gt;</p><p></p><p>&lt;div id="grad1" style="text-align:center;</p><p>margin:auto;color:#000000;font-size:</p><p>20px;font-weight:bold"&gt;</p><p>Fluorine is in Group VII, and a single fluorine atom has seven valence electrons. However, by the Octet Rule it would like to gain one electron to get a full octet of valence electrons. Two fluorine atoms can each "sacrifice" one of their valence electrons to form a single bond between the atoms.....♥♥</p><p>&lt;/div&gt;</p><p></p><p>&lt;/body&gt;</p><p>&lt;/html&gt;</p><p>

Answered by kousthubeswar
0

Answer:

sharing of electrons

Explanation:

fluorine contains 7 electrons in the outermost shell

by using lewis dot structure we can understand easily

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