You think probable to covalent bonding.
Two atoms sharing three pairs of electrons have a triple bond.
True. Atoms of some elements, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus, can form triple bonds by sharing three pairs of electrons with other atoms. This type of bonding allows for the formation of stable molecules, such as nitrogen gas (N₂), where each nitrogen atom shares three pairs of electrons with the other.
In a triple bond between two atoms, a total of six valence electrons are involved. Each atom contributes three electrons, resulting in three shared pairs of electrons. This type of bonding occurs typically between nonmetals, such as in nitrogen gas (N₂), where the two nitrogen atoms share three pairs of electrons.
Nitrogen's position on the periodic table means it is 3 electrons short of the stable noble gas configuration on Neon. If two Nitrogen atoms mutually share 3 electrons to form a triple bond, each nitrogen will have its required quota of electrons to iso-electronic with Neon and thus be stable.
Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between two atoms. The number of valence electrons involved in a covalent bond depends on the atoms participating in the bond. Generally, atoms share electrons to achieve a stable octet, which means they typically share one, two, or three pairs of electrons in a covalent bond.
Two atoms sharing three pairs of electrons have a triple bond.
yeap!
True. Nitrogen can share three pairs of electrons and has a lone pair of electrons for a total of eight in it's valence shell
A triple covalent bond.
covalent bonds
True. Atoms of some elements, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus, can form triple bonds by sharing three pairs of electrons with other atoms. This type of bonding allows for the formation of stable molecules, such as nitrogen gas (N₂), where each nitrogen atom shares three pairs of electrons with the other.
In a triple bond between two atoms, a total of six valence electrons are involved. Each atom contributes three electrons, resulting in three shared pairs of electrons. This type of bonding occurs typically between nonmetals, such as in nitrogen gas (N₂), where the two nitrogen atoms share three pairs of electrons.
True. Atoms of some elements, like nitrogen, can form triple bonds where they share three pairs of electrons. This occurs when atoms need to achieve a stable electron configuration by sharing electrons with another atom.
Three pairs of electrons.
If both atoms share, it is a covalent bond with 3 bonds. If only one atom shares, it is a dative or coordinate bond
triple bonding
When non-metals bond together, they share electrons. This is called a covalent bond. By sharing pairs of electrons, two or more different atoms can claim they have 8 electrons in their outer energy level, which gives them noble gas configuration, which they all want. If they share one pair of electrons, it's a single covalent bond. Two pairs is a double, and three pairs is a triple. Whatever it takes to get to 8.