Dragonmaster262
Unorthodox top student
Do molecules which are made up of the same type of element' such as O2(Oxygen gas)' have the same valency as the individual element? For example does OS, N2 etc have the same valency as O and N respectively?
Thanks for the pick up, i've edited it ^^lol was that a typo or did u mean O^-1
coz it O^-2
and it has O valency when O2 as we take the valency of the whole molecule
thats what i think neway
Atoms will share pairs of electrons so that each has a full outer shell, if possible. This is known as the octet rule, since the outer shell of most of the non-metals can hold at most eight electrons (there are many exceptions, including hydrogen molecule!). The fluorine atom has seven valence electrons. A diatomic fluorine molecule has two atoms and fourteen valence electrons total. If each atom has three electron pairs that it does not share and one electron pair that act as a bond, both atoms fulfill the octet rule (6 free electrons + 2 shared for each atom). The Lewis structure for the fluorine molecule looks like this:
Atoms can share more than one pair of electrons. A single bond is one pair of electrons shared between two atoms. A double bond is two pairs of electrons shared between two atoms. The oxygen atom has six valence electrons, so the diatomic oxygen molecule has two atoms and twelve valence electrons. In order for the oxygen molecule to obey the octet rule, it must have a double bond:
A triple bond is three pairs of electrons shared between two atoms. The nitrogen atom has five valence electrons, so the diatomic nitrogen molecule has two atoms and ten valence electrons. In order for the nitrogen molecule to obey the octet rule, it must have a triple bond:
Yeah, atoms/molecules in their natual state have an oxidising number of 0umm arnt any diatomic non metal elements eg H2 O2 N2 all have valencies of zero. or is this for some other rule, i think it was in acidic environment topic. it was with the calculating oxidizing number rules or something. and one of the rules were and molecule like H2 O2 N2 has zero valency
o yea, lol, i havnt done nething for chem in a while.Yeah, atoms/molecules in their natual state have an oxidising number of 0
I just got lots of chem shoved down my throat for the last two days... 12 hours of chem in 2 days *shivers*o yea, lol, i havnt done nething for chem in a while.
haha thats what i been doing for englishI just got lots of chem shoved down my throat for the last two days... 12 hours of chem in 2 days *shivers*