C in carbon monoxide is sp hybridized.
The C in h3c is sp3 hybridized The c in ch is sp2 hybridized the c in ch2 is sp2 hybridized
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sp3d2 hybridization. Example: sulfur hexafluoride (SF6)
C = 12O = 16 CO = 28 g for 1 mole
Assuming you mean acetylene, H-C triple bond C-H, then each of the C is sp hybridized.
C in carbon monoxide is sp hybridized.
The central atom in CO is carbon, and its hybridization is sp. This means that carbon's 2s orbital and one of its 2p orbitals combine to form two sp hybrid orbitals.
The hybridization of chlorine in HCl is sp³, as it has one lone pair of electrons and forms one sigma bond with hydrogen. The chlorine atom is surrounded by four electron domains, leading to sp³ hybridization.
CCl4 features all single covalent bonds, so the hybridization is sp3.
In urea, the carbon atom is sp2 hybridized and the nitrogen atom is sp2 hybridized. This is because both atoms have three regions of electron density due to the lone pairs and bonds they form in the molecule.
The hybridization of carbon could vary depending on the nature of compounds. It could be sp (as in alkynes), sp2 (as in alkenes, carbonyl groups) or sp3 (as in alkanes).
The C in h3c is sp3 hybridized The c in ch is sp2 hybridized the c in ch2 is sp2 hybridized
The equilibrium constant for the reaction C + O2 -> CO is Kc = [CO]/([C][O2]), where the square brackets denote molar concentrations.
The hybridization of NCl3 is sp3.
C + 1/2 O2 ----> CO ------> mole basis 12 C + 16 O2 ----> 28 CO -----> mass basis CO made = ( 36 g C ) ( 28 g CO / 12 g C ) = 84 g CO <-----------------
H. C. Prange Co. ended in 1992.
H. C. Prange Co. was created in 1881.