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Boron trichloride does not follow the octet rule. Boron does not allow the eight required electrons in the outer shell.
BCl3 and BEH2 obey the octet rule because Boron and Beryllium are exceptions to the octet rule and can have stable electron configurations with less than 8 electrons. Cl3CF, NO, and SbF5 do not obey the octet rule because they have incomplete or expanded valence shells.
BCl3 is the formula for Boron Chloride. As a matter of interest it does not obey the octet rule. It is also called a Lewis Acid.
Yes the sulfur needs to have two more electrons to fill the octet, and chlorine only needs one. So there are two chlorines to give sulfur one electron. The whole molecule is covalently bonded so the electrons are shared between the chlorines and the sulfur so that both the elements octets are filled.
BCL3 is a Lewis acid because it can accept an electron pair from a Lewis base. Boron in BCl3 has an incomplete octet, making it electron deficient and capable of accepting an electron pair to complete its octet, giving it a positive charge.
Boron trichloride does not follow the octet rule. Boron does not allow the eight required electrons in the outer shell.
BCl3 and BEH2 obey the octet rule because Boron and Beryllium are exceptions to the octet rule and can have stable electron configurations with less than 8 electrons. Cl3CF, NO, and SbF5 do not obey the octet rule because they have incomplete or expanded valence shells.
F2ccf2
no it does not follow octet rule
octet rule
BCl3 is the formula for Boron Chloride. As a matter of interest it does not obey the octet rule. It is also called a Lewis Acid.
Yes the sulfur needs to have two more electrons to fill the octet, and chlorine only needs one. So there are two chlorines to give sulfur one electron. The whole molecule is covalently bonded so the electrons are shared between the chlorines and the sulfur so that both the elements octets are filled.
BCL3 is a Lewis acid because it can accept an electron pair from a Lewis base. Boron in BCl3 has an incomplete octet, making it electron deficient and capable of accepting an electron pair to complete its octet, giving it a positive charge.
No, AsH3 does not follow the octet rule. Arsenic, the central atom in AsH3, can expand its valence shell to hold more than eight electrons in bonding.
yes PCl3 obey octet rule there are 5 electrons in the valence shell of phosphorous it need 3 electron to complete its octet so it form bond with 3 chlorine after bond formation there are 8 electron in its octet it obey octet rule
Of course it does obey.There are 8 electrons around Nitrogen.
H2S does follow the octet rule. When you draw the Lewis Structure for H2S, it looks like this: If you count up the lone pairs and sigma bonds (each worth 2), there are 8, thus, H2S follows the octet rule.