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.
No, the bond angle for linear structure is 180 degrees.
Trigonal Planar (120 degrees)
120 degrees
120 degrees is an obtuse angle
Trigonal Planar. The ideal angle between the carbon and oxygen bond is 120 degrees
120
The NO2 molecule is a bent molecule with a central nitrogen attached to two oxygen atoms. The bond angle between the N-O bonds is 134.30
No, the bond angle for linear structure is 180 degrees.
Nitrogen trichloride is a planar molecule. The nitrogen atom is directly bonded with three chlorine atoms on the same plane. According to the VSEPR theory, it has a bond angle of 120 degrees.
120 degrees
120 degrees I think
PCl5 is covalent in the vapour phase with a trigonal biyramidal shape. It is ionic in the solid consisting of PCl4+ PCl6- In solution it can be covalent or ionic depending on the solvent.
For a truly trigonal planar molecule the bond angles are 120 0 exactly.
Trigonal Planar (120 degrees)
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.
120 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