Any linear molecule in which the central atom has one or more lone pairs on it. Oxygen is the best example. The large negative charge on the lone pairs will force the electrons in the sigma bonds between the atoms away from itself, bending the structure.
The shape of a water molecule (H2O) is bent or angular, resembling a letter "V". This occurs due to the two lone pairs of electrons on the oxygen atom, causing the molecule to have a bent molecular geometry.
The bond angle in a molecule with a bent geometry and two lone pairs is approximately 104.5 degrees.
It is a di atomic molecule. They are always linear
Yes because there are 4 total pairs and 2 shared pairs
The molecule geometry of SeO2 is bent (angular) with a bond angle of around 119 degrees. This is due to the lone pairs of electrons on selenium causing repulsion and pushing the bonded oxygen atoms closer together.
bent
OF2 has a bent shape.
it depends... what does it look like?
The point group of a bent nitrogen-dioxide molecule is C2v.
The shape of a water molecule (H2O) is bent or angular, resembling a letter "V". This occurs due to the two lone pairs of electrons on the oxygen atom, causing the molecule to have a bent molecular geometry.
Bent, like water.
Okay, you know how a parallelogram looks like a bent/pushed rectangle? A rhombus is like a bent/pushed square.
It's a polar molecule! -Jessica King
bent
No, it is a tetrahedral molecule
yes it does, because the oxygen contains lone pairs which makes the water molecule a bent geometry shape.
Yes, water is a bend molecule with a bond angle of about 105 degrees. They are described as bent planar (or V shaped)