H20 (water)
2 hytrogen atoms have a total of 2 electrons, an Oxygen atom contain one electron. so they go through covalent bond to get the total of 8 electrons for oxygen
There are several - the most notable being H+, H-, and Li+.
no it does not follow octet rule
The octet rule is a rule in chemistry where elements want to form bonds to attain 8 electrons in their valence shell. An example of this would be sodium chloride. Bonds that don't have 8 electrons in their valence shell don't follow this rule
No chlorine oxides will obey the octet rule.
Hydrogen is the atom that doesn't always obey the octet rule. It only needs 2 electrons to have a full outer shell, rather than the 8 electrons typically required by the octet rule. Oxygen and bromine usually follow the octet rule.
Az important rule: any octet has to have eight parts, otherwise it is not an octet.
An example of a molecule that follows the octet rule is methane (CH4). In methane, carbon forms four covalent bonds with hydrogen, allowing each atom to achieve a full outer shell of electrons (octet) and satisfy the octet rule.
There are several - the most notable being H+, H-, and Li+.
no it does not follow octet rule
The octet rule is a rule in chemistry where elements want to form bonds to attain 8 electrons in their valence shell. An example of this would be sodium chloride. Bonds that don't have 8 electrons in their valence shell don't follow this rule
No chlorine oxides will obey the octet rule.
NH3 is not an exception to the octet rule. Nitrogen (N) in NH3 has a total of 8 valence electrons (5 from nitrogen and 3 from hydrogen), fulfilling the octet rule. Nitrogen has 3 bonded pairs and 1 lone pair of electrons, following the octet rule.
Hydrogen is the atom that doesn't always obey the octet rule. It only needs 2 electrons to have a full outer shell, rather than the 8 electrons typically required by the octet rule. Oxygen and bromine usually follow the octet rule.
Yes, iodine can exceed the octet rule and have an expanded octet due to its ability to accommodate more than eight electrons in its valence shell.
One example of a compound where the octet rule is expanded to include 12 electrons is sulfur hexafluoride (SF6). In SF6, the sulfur atom has 12 electrons around it, exceeding the typical octet rule. This expansion allows sulfur to complete its valence shell and achieve stability.
The octet rule is the tendency of many chemical elements to have eight electrons in the valence shell.
octet rule