Science, asked by AykkuMithun, 11 months ago

Number of lone pairs in Phosphonic acid are ​

Answers

Answered by dipanshu5750
0

Answer:

Zero

Explanation:

The phosphorus atom has zero lone pairs, and uses all its five valence electrons to form bonds with the four oxygen atoms - 3 single bonds and 1 double bond. As you can see, the five bonds it forms give phosphorus a total of 10 electrons in its valence shell, which implies that it does not obey the octet rule

Answered by marishthangaraj
0

There are zero number of lone pairs in phosphonic acid.

Explanation:

  • Phosphonic acids were being utilized for their bio active possessions (drug, pro-drug), for bone directing, for the strategy of supramolecular or hybrid constituents, for the fictionalization of surfaces, for logical drives, for medical imaging or as phosphoantigen.
  • Phosphonic acid is a phosphorus oxoacid that consists of a single pentavalent phosphorus covalently bound via single bonds to a single hydrogen and two hydroxy groups and via a double bond to an oxygen.
  • The parent of the class of phosphonic acids. It has a role as a fungicide.

Learn more about lone pairs.

The total number of lone pairs of electrons N2o3

https://brainly.in/question/1442022

What are the number of lone pairs and bond pairs in SO2? And how to draw its structure with this info.

https://brainly.in/question/1434477

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