In nitrogen dioxide (NO2), the electron domain geometry is determined by the arrangement of electron pairs around the central nitrogen atom. Nitrogen has one lone pair and forms two bonds with oxygen atoms, resulting in a total of three electron domains. This configuration leads to a bent molecular geometry, as the presence of the lone pair repels the bonding pairs, influencing the overall shape of the molecule.
tetrahedral
Octahedral is the edcc geometry and the molecular geometry is square pyramidal
The electron domain of AsF3 (arsenic trifluoride) consists of four regions of electron density: three bonding pairs of electrons from the As-F bonds and one lone pair of electrons on the arsenic atom. This results in a tetrahedral electron geometry. However, due to the presence of the lone pair, the molecular geometry is trigonal pyramidal.
The electron-domain geometry for the chlorate ion (ClO3-) is trigonal pyramidal. This geometry arises from the three bonding pairs of electrons between chlorine and the three oxygen atoms, along with one lone pair of electrons on the chlorine atom. The presence of the lone pair affects the shape, leading to the pyramidal arrangement.
The shape of PF3 is trigonal bipyramidal. The geometric diagram determines this shape. Its electron domain geometry and molecular geometry are also the same.
The electron domain geometry of NO2 is bent or V-shaped, with an angle of approximately 134 degrees. This is because NO2 has two electron domains around the nitrogen atom, resulting in a bent molecular geometry.
The electron-domain geometry of PF6 is Octahedral, since the central atom Phosphorus has an electron pair geometry which is octahedral
Electron Domain is Tetrahedral Molecular Geometry is Trigonal Pyramidal
The electron domain charge cloud geometry of ICI5 s usually positively charged. This is because the process involves the loss of electrons. The electron-domain charge-cloud geometry of ICl5 is octahedral.
The electron geometry ("Electronic Domain Geometry") for PF3 is tetrahedral. The molecular geometry, on the other hand, is Trigonal Pyramidal.
Tetrahedral
tetrahedral
tetradhedral
Octahedral
tetrahedral
The electron-domain geometry of ClO4- is tetrahedral. It has four electron domains around the central chlorine atom, resulting in a tetrahedral arrangement.
tetrahedral