What is hybridisation? How is it done in plants?
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What is hybridisation? How is it done in plants?
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Hybridization is the process of crossing two genetically different individuals to result in a third individual with a different, often preferred, set of traits. Plants of the same species cross easily and produce fertile progeny. Such plants are referred to as cross-pollinated plants.
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- In valence bond theory, orbital hybridization is the notion of combining atomic orbitals to generate new hybrid orbitals suited for electron pairing to form chemical bonds.
- The valence-shell s orbital of a carbon atom that makes four single bonds, for example, mixes with three valence-shell p orbitals to generate four equivalent sp3 mixtures that are organized in a tetrahedral pattern around the carbon to attach to four other atoms.
- Hybrid orbitals, which are symmetrically placed in space, are important in explaining molecular geometry and atomic bonding qualities.
- Hybrid orbitals are often created by combining atomic orbitals with similar energies.
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