This is all about the imaginable solutions for the possible Lewis structure of chlorate, ClO3-.
You may think: Since Cl is more electronegative than O, stick Cl in the middle, connect the 3 O's to it, and add one lone pair to the Cl to fill its octet, as well as 3 lone pairs to each O to fill their octets. Now, you have 3 bonds, 10 lone pairs, summing to 26 valence electrons, which is what we started with.
This looks simple but is not correct: The octet rule is violated and no place of the negative charge is given.
Corrected: Chlorine, the most electronegative, is mid-centered. The whole ion structure has 26 valence electrons available for bonding and lone pairs (7 from chlorine + (3×6) from the three O atoms + 1 from the negativecharge).
First: One O is single bonded (2) to Cl with three lone pairs on oxygen (6). (This O-atom carries the negative charge of the chlorate anion).
Second: the other two O have a double bond (2×4), each with two lone electron pairs (2×4).
The last two electrons (2) go to a lone pair on Cl.
When you add up all bold-italic numbers you'll get 26.
Please view the Lewis structure (also of three resonance structures) in 'Related links' down this answering page. A figure can be more convincing than 100 words.
Accounting for formal chargeThe problem with Lewis structures is that sometimes you will have two or more perfectly valid structures that are different. In these cases, it is useful to account for formal charge. The rule of thumb for formal charge: the Lewis structure that minimizes formal charge tends to be the correct structure.Formal charge can be calculated by taking the number of valence electrons an atom in a molecule "came with" and subtracting the number of lone pair electrons and half of the bonded electrons.
So take the first example in which you achieve a valid structure through single bonds. The central chlorine atom comes in with 7 valence electrons. It has one lone pair (2) and shares (3) electrons in three single bonds. Chlorine's formal charge is 7-5 = 2. Then take an oxygen, which comes in with 6 valence electrons. It has three lone pairs (6 electrons) and shares (1) electron in a single bond. Its formal charge is 6-7 = -1. All three oxygen atoms will then have a formal charge of -1. (Note that when you add up the formal charges, you get the overall charge of the ion).
Now account for the formal charge in the second structure. You will note that the formal charge for the chlorine, the double bonded oxygens, and the single bonded oxygens is 0, 0, and -1 respectively.
Going back to our rule of thumb (the structure that minimizes formal charge is correct), we see that the second structure with two double-bonded oxygens is the most likely structure.
The Lewis dot structure of ClO3- starts with a Cl for the chlorine atom in the center. Around this are drawn 3 O atoms. Two of the oxygen atoms are joined to the chlorine with double dashes, and the third is joined with a single dash. To finish, the chlorine atom receives two dots on its unjoined side, each doubly bonded oxygen atom receives two sets of two dots and the singly bonded oxygen gets three sets of double dots.
The bond angles in HClO3 are approximately 109.5 degrees.
HCLO3--->H3O+Clo3 H3O--->H+H2O H2O--->2H+O
This acid is known as chloric acid or hydrogen chlorate.
Resonance structure.
The Lewis dot structure for germanium (Ge) is: Ge: :Ge:
The bond angles in HClO3 are approximately 109.5 degrees.
The ClO3- anion formed when HClO3 is dissolved is called Chlorate
HCLO3--->H3O+Clo3 H3O--->H+H2O H2O--->2H+O
This acid is known as chloric acid or hydrogen chlorate.
Resonance structure.
The Lewis dot structure for germanium (Ge) is: Ge: :Ge:
The Lewis structure of the compound CCLO is as follows: CCCl-O.
The formal charge of the NCO Lewis structure is zero.
HClO3 is a covalent compound. It is formed by the sharing of electrons between the hydrogen, chlorine, and oxygen atoms.
No, not exactly. It is an ionic compound so it would not have a Lewis dot structure. However, the carbonate anion, CO3^2- does have a Lewis dot structure.
The molecular geometry of the BR3 Lewis structure is trigonal planar.
The Lewis structure was created by American chemist Gilbert N. Lewis in 1916. Lewis proposed using dots to represent the valence electrons of an atom in order to show how atoms bond together in molecules.