Chemistry, asked by jkr18042001, 1 year ago

why lithium hydride not electron deficient

Answers

Answered by danish2394
0
lithium shows only +1 oxidation state in lithium hydride so it can share only 1 electron so it is not electron deficient...
Answered by aryansuts01
0

Answer:

Lithium can only share one electron in the +1 oxidation state it exhibits in lithium hydride, hence it is not electron deficient.

Explanation:

An inorganic substance having the formula LiH is lithium hydride. While conventional specimens are grey, this alkali metal hydride is a colourless solid. It has a high melting point, is insoluble but reacting including all protic organic solvents, and has properties of a (ionic) salt. Lithium hydride is a substance that can store hydrogen and function as a conductor for Li+ ions. LiH is utilized as a precursor to create complicated hydrides most frequently for application purposes.

When treated with water, lithium hydride (LiH), a grey crystalline solid created by the direct fusion of its component components at high temperatures, quickly releases hydrogen gas.

A white or transparent crystalline bulk or powdered is what lithium hydride looks like. Due to trace levels of colloidally distributed lithium, the commercial version has pale bluish-gray lumps. Lithium hydride is an alkali metal hydride in which lithium is the metal.

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