No, but they are pretty close. The bond angle in ozone is 116.8°, and the bond angle in sulfur dioxide is 119°. The oxygens bonded in sulfur dioxide are bond doubly bonded, while in ozone it has two resonace forms where one of the oxygen hangs on by a single bond. The boiling point temperatures are prety close too...
bent
No, Compounds with the same empirical formula have the same elements in the same ratio. SO2 and CO2 contain different elements. SO2 is a compound of sulfur and oxygen while CO2 is a compound of carbon and oxygen.
1 mole SO2 = 64.064g SO2 0.45g SO2 x 1mol SO2/64.064g SO2 = 0.0070 mole SO2
SO2 has a bent molecular geometry such that you can say there is an oxygen end and a Sulfur end in the molecule. Because of this, the pull that the oxygen atoms exert on the electrons results in a net dipole moment. By contrast SO3 has a trigonal planar geometry. The oxygen atoms are arranged in a perfectly symmetrical arrangement around the central sulfur atom. As a result, the polarities of the 3 sulfur-oxygen bonds cancel each other out.
No, SO2 is bent.
No, the geometry of CO2 is linear while the geometry of SO2 is bent.
SO2 is Trigonal-Planar.
bent
CFC's react with ozone. They decompose it and cause depletion.
No, Compounds with the same empirical formula have the same elements in the same ratio. SO2 and CO2 contain different elements. SO2 is a compound of sulfur and oxygen while CO2 is a compound of carbon and oxygen.
No it is not the same. Kind of, but geometry is more advanced.
No. The ozone is stratosphere is good ozone. The ozone in troposphere is bad ozone.
The temperature of ozone layer is same as stratosphere. It is because ozone layer is in stratosphere.
Both the ozone layers are formed by the same parent element. That is oxygen.
Ozone is basically the same trioxygen molecule. It is present both in the stratosphere as well as troposphere.
the further side in the same direction
No, it is not. the ozone is different from mesosphere.