120 degrees
The bond angle of sulfur dibromide (SBr2) is approximately 102 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.
the shape is linear and the bond angle is 180 degree
The bond angle of carbon disulfide (CS2) molecule is 180 degrees, which forms a linear molecular geometry.
Bond angles in various molecules tend to be as big as possible and therefore we would expect a bond angle of 120°. Ammonia, however, is a permanent dipole and therefore acts like it owns a 4th hydrogen atom. Ammonia more or less acts like a tetrahedral molecule. This phenomena occurs in water as well. The theoretical bond angle for a tetrahedral molecule would be 109.5°, but in ammonia it's a little lower, the experimental bond angle of ammonia is 107°. This is because of the additional repulsive force of the electron pair occupying the "fourth" spot of the tetrahedron.
The bond angle of AlCl3 is 120 degrees.
The bond angle of N2O is 180 degrees.
The bond angle in CO2 is 180 degrees.
The bond angle for H2S is approximately 92 degrees.
The bond angle for AsF3 is approximately 87.5 degrees.
The bond angle for NBr3 is approximately 107 degrees.
The bond angle for IO2 is around 120 degrees.
The bond angle in NI3 is approximately 107 degrees.
The bond angle for OF2 is approximately 103 degrees.
The bond angle for SO2 is approximately 119 degrees.
The bond angle in NF3 is approximately 107 degrees.
The bond angle in SF2 is approximately 98 degrees.