The Pauling scale is a numerical scale used to measure the electronegativity of elements, developed by chemist Linus Pauling in 1932. It assigns a dimensionless value to each element, indicating its ability to attract electrons in a chemical bond. The scale ranges from around 0.7 for cesium, the least electronegative element, to 4.0 for fluorine, the most electronegative. This scale helps predict the nature of bonds between atoms, such as ionic or covalent character.
Nitrogen's electronegativity is 3.04 on the Pauling scale.
The electronegativity of phosphorus is 2.19 on the Pauling scale.
2.54 in pauling scale
On the Pauling scale it is 2.60
Plutonium electronegativity on Pauling scale is 1,28. Iron electronegativity on Pauling scale is 1,83. Plutonium is chemically more reactive.
3.04 on Pauling's scale
Chlorine has an electronegativity of 3.16 on the Pauling scale, while hydrogen has an electronegativity of 2.20. This indicates that chlorine is more electronegative than hydrogen.
The electronegativity of curium is 1,28 on the Pauling scale.
The electronegativity of oxygen (O) is 3.44 on the Pauling scale. Electronegativity is a measure of an atom's ability to attract shared electrons in a chemical bond towards itself. Oxygen has a relatively high electronegativity due to its strong affinity for electrons.
The scale of electronegativity was first drawn up by Linus Pauling in 1936. Linus Carl Pauling was born Feb 28th 1901 in Portland Oregon (USA) and died August 19th 1994 in California. He won a Nobel prize for Chemistry in 1954 and one for Peace in 1962. For more information see the related link below
The exact value of Fluorine's electronegativity on Pauling's scale is 3.98. It is the highest value of electronegativity on the scale, indicating Fluorine's strong ability to attract electrons towards itself in a chemical bond.
Assuming you mean electronegativity, it is 2.2 on the Pauling scale.