No, the bond angle for linear structure is 180 degrees.
Trigonal Planar (120 degrees)
Linear with a bond angle of 180 and Non-Polar Covalent
Trigonal Planar. The ideal angle between the carbon and oxygen bond is 120 degrees
A trigonal planar molecule such as sulfur trioxide (SO3) or boron trihydride (BH3) has a trigonal planar shape. Trigonal pyramidal molecules such as ammonia (NH3) have bond angle closer to 107 degrees.
120 degrees is an obtuse angle
134.3o. It is a bent molecule, but because of the additional electron pairs on the O atoms, the bond angle is deviated from 120o.
The bond angle in the linear molecule is 180 degrees.
120 degrees as methyl carbocation has a trigonal planar structure with 3 hybridised sp2 orbitals in a plane with bond angle 120 deg and the fourth unhybridised orbital perpendicular to the plane
120
120
the shape is bent and the bond angle is approximately 120
O=C=O is the structure and it is linear. So the bond angle is 180o
180 degrees and it is linear
Molecular shape= linear bond angle = 180 degrees
The bond angle is 180 because ICl2- has three Lone Pairs attached to it making it Linear.
the shape is linear and the bond angle is 180 degree
It is a straight angle, in other words, 180 degrees.