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No. Carbonates are an exception to the rule of carbon compounds being organic.
True.
no it does not follow octet rule
No chlorine oxides will obey the octet rule.
1. the incomplete octet of a central atom 2. odd electron molecule 3. compound with expanded octet 4. acc. to rule atoms complete their octet to complete their octet to become stable like inert gas, but it is seen that inert gases like xenon are not stabkle they combine with fluorine and oxygen to form no. of compounds. 5. shape of molecule cant be explained 6. stability of molecule cant be explained
The octet rule does not apply to transition metals.
The octet rule only applies to elements that are heavy enough to have reached the second shell of electrons. In the first shell, the octet rule does not apply because the first shell is completed with only two electrons, not eight. So no, the octet rule does not apply to beryllium hydride.
Neon obeys the octet rule by not reacting and not forming ionic compounds as it already has a stable outer shell of eight electrons.
because it does
Yes
The rule of thumb is organic compounds are carbon based.
· organic · osmosis · oxygen · octet rule
This is not a serious rule.
No, Transition metals do not obey the octet rule in simple compounds , Am is an 'f' block transition metal.
No. Carbonates are an exception to the rule of carbon compounds being organic.
The octet rule does not apply to transition and inner transition metals and to the first for or five elements in the periodic table.
True.