CO32- is trigonal planar, bond angles are 1200
Trigonal planar
Phosphorus trichloride has a trigonal pyramidal shape.
Yes, it is possible.
trigonal planar
trigonal bipyramid
SbCl5 is non-polar because it has a Trigonal Bipyramid VSEPR shape
Some typical shapes include tetrahedral, linear (or straight), bent, trigonal planar, trigonal bipyramid, and ring compounds.
In the vapour and liquid it has a triangular bipyramidal sconfiguration three Cl in the same plane as P with a 120 degree Cl-P Cl bond angle. the other two Cls are at right angles. In the solid it is IONIC! PCl4+ PCl6-
See the Related Questions link for how to find the shape of any molecule.Seems like an unlike stable neutral molecule however... is there a negative charge on the molecule? If so, then it is bent. If it is a free radical than the VSEPR rules don't apply.
PBr5 is non-polar because it is a trigonal bipyramid with no unbound pairs.
It could be a bipyramid.
CO32- is trigonal planar, bond angles are 1200
Shape: Trigonal
Trigonal Pyramidal. It is not trigonal planar because there is one lone pair around the central atom, just like the shape of ammonia.
Formaldehyde has a nonpolar trigonal planar molecule.
The phosphorus trichloride (PCl3) has a molecule with a trigonal pyramidal form.