Chemistry, asked by aanchalchaudhary768, 4 months ago

write the limitation of slaters rule

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
7

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Limitations of Slater's rules.

According to Slater's rules, the outer shell electrons do not shield the inner electrons. This may not be true. For example, even the outer S electrons penetrate quite to the nucleus and would thus exercise a shielding effect.

Answered by aroranishant799
0

Answer:

The limitation of slaters rule is that the outer shell electrons do not shelter the inner electrons.

Explanation:

The main premise behind Slater's law is that an electron's actual charge is equal to the amount you'd estimate from a particular number of protons, minus a specific amount of charge from other electrons.

The Slater's rules limitations:

The outer shell electrons do not shelter the inner electrons, according to Slater's laws. This might not be the case. Even the outside S electrons, for example, penetrate all the way to the nucleus and so provide a shielding effect.

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