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lol but how can something exist as an ion and then just as a molecular compoundLucid Scintilla said:I don't get what you're saying, but nitrogen dioxide is a molecule, nitrite is an ion.
One has no overall charge (molecule), the other has a net charge (-1) (ion).
???
ah k yeh thanks heaps so its to do with the electrons koolPwnage101 said:wat he's askin is legit, how can somehing have same molecular formula, different charge - and as i said, its all about the electrons - the protons will give u the type of atom it is (ie the element), so the nuclei that make up the atoms in the molecules of all 3 aforementions NO2's is the same, but there is a different number of electrons.....
Nitrogen dioxide can only be formed by the oxidation of nitric oxide, NO.crammy90 said:This is not an outter shell and i dont see why this O would join in when it isnt going to receive a full shell??? isnt that the point of bonding and why some cant bond with others as they must recieve a full outter shell from it?
what the...are they both typos? :Scrammy90 said:
The first picture is correct but you've labelled the paired electrons as unpaired. The unpaired electrons are used in bonding but the pairs are not.crammy90 said:haha i drew it but yeh
i dont quiet undersand this?
This part wasnt written properlyThe lewis structure for NO has a nitrogen with five electrons of which three are unpaired and an oxygen with six electrons of which two are unpaired. When the molecule is produced a double bond forms leaving nitrogen with a single unpaired electon
i understand it aha yayNow if that molecule is oxidised the atoms now present are nitrogen with five electrons of which three are unpaired and two oxygen atoms with six electrons of which two are unpaired. An unpaired electron on each oxygen binds to the nitrogen through an unpaired electron. Now there is a single unpaired electron on each oxygen and nitrogen atom. A second bond can form between an oxygen and the nitrogen leaving a single unpaired electron on the other oxygen atom.
Because it is a double bond there is one single bond and one coordinate covalent single bond.crammy90 said:where one donates more than another. Like i know coordinate covalent is when one species provides BOTH electrons. Here O provides one seemingly.
The part about unpaired electrons floating around is incorrect. They would form an electron pair because there are only four available orbitals in oxygen. (Reasoning is part of aufbau and pauli below).crammy90 said:so for a coordinate covalent bond for this syllabus using oxygen:
is that all right?
The bond is not ionic because when the atoms separate the electrons arent left behind. They go back with their original atom.crammy90 said:what in a covalent bond has one species has provided the electron pair for the bond, what separates it from being ionic as in ionic they donate electron pairs :S
or is it just because ion is metal + non metal and coordinate covalent is like an ionic bond for non-metal + non-metals
It is based on the Aufbau Principle and Pauli Exclusion Principle as well as others.crammy90 said:and lastly: how do u know if an elements/compounds electrons are paired. Like when i was drawing Mg i realised i didnt know whether to put them together or not..
Ozone is much less stable than oxygen so it isnt really attracted at all. Ozone will spontaneously decompose to oxygen but it wont spontaneously form. It takes high energy UV radiation and lightning to create it.crammy90 said:lol and what causes the extra O in ozone to be attracted to the stable O2