The hybridization of water (H2O) is sp3, as it has four regions of electron density around the oxygen atom (two bonding pairs and two lone pairs).
I might not know the answer to my question but I do not think it is SP^3.
There are 4.17 moles of H2O present in 75.0g of H2O.
The hybridization of methane is sp3, which means that the carbon atom is bonded to four other atoms in a tetrahedral geometry. This involves the promotion of one of the 2s electrons to the 2p orbital, creating four sp3 hybrid orbitals that are used for bonding with the four hydrogen atoms.
H2O(l) --> H2O(g) + heatshows the process of freezing.
In molecular BH3 the molecule is planar with bond angles of 120o so the hybridisation of the central boron atom is sp2. In the dimer B2H6 the molecule has two bridging hydrogens. The hybridisation of each boron is approxomately sp3 and each bridge has a 3 centre B-H-B bond formed by the overlap of the sp3 orbtals on the B atoms and the s orbital on the hydrogen.
The mixing of atomic orbitals is called hybridisation.
Hybridisation (biology) the process of combining different varieties of organisms to create a hybrid
carbon can have either sp3 ,sp2 or sp1 hybridised orbital depending upon the type of hybridisation hybridisation influences the bond and bond therapy (strength) in the organic compounds
its a sp3 hybridisation
u tell me
yes
The nitrogen atom undergoes sp3 hybridization in ammonia.
Yes. There is no hybridization involved in the diatomic hydrogen molecule.
It is pure (elemental) Carbon (in crystallic tetraedical sp3-hybridisation)
Because the ducks have different characteristics and cannot be classified
Linda Bredin has written: 'Detection of HPV by in-situ hybridisation'
Pure and hybrid orbitals in acetylene