Chemistry, asked by Bharatsinh6703, 1 month ago

What is called nucleophile?

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Answered by diyanranawat26
0

Explanation:

A necleophile is a chemical species that donates an electron pair to form a chemical bond in relation to a reaction.

Answered by DEBOBROTABHATTACHARY
0

● A Nucleophile Is A Reactant That Provides A Pair Of Electrons To Form A New Covalent Bond.

These are anions - negatively charged ions. In other cases, they are neutral chemical species with free electrons or lone pairs of electrons.

● The key factors that determine the nucleophile's strength are charge, electronegativity, steric hindrance, and nature of the solvent. Nucleophilicity increases as the density of negative charge increases.

● A nucleophile is an electron donor (has an electron pair available for bonding) that bonds to an atom other than hydrogen.

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