Science, asked by Anonymous, 4 months ago

Why carbon is tetravalent?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Tetravalent Carbon. Carbon is normally tetravalent, meaning it makes four bonds to other atoms. ... The lines represent two electron bonds, the dots represent electrons, and the balloons represent orbitals. Carbon has four valence electrons, that is, four electrons in the outermost shell.

Explanation:

Answered by archuv84
18

Answer:

Hi Mate ☺️

Your answer is:-

Carbon is tetravalent because it can bond with a maximum of four hydrogen atoms.

Explanation:

The valence of an element is the maximum number of hydrogen or chlorine atoms that can combine with an atom of the element.

Carbon is in Group 14 of the Periodic Table, so a carbon atom has four valence electrons.

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