Chemistry, asked by anishdheeravath, 6 months ago

why is BF3 covalent in nature

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Answered by shaikhmahewish1127
1

Answer:

BF3 is a molecule consisting of an sp2 hybrid of Boron covalently bonded with 3 atoms of fluorine. The covalent bond tells us that electrons are shared, rather than lost by boron and gained by fluorine. This bond is formed because of Boron's high ionization energy. ... So boron cannot lose its electrons to fluorine. that's why BF3 is covalent in nature

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