It is appropriate to form double or triple bonds in a Lewis structure when four or six electrons are shared.
A Lewis structure is a representation of a molecule using dots to show the valence electrons in the molecule. This dots are shown around the symbols of the elements.
However, in instances where four or six electrons are shared between bonding atoms, a double or triple bond is used. A double bond means that four electrons are shared. A triple bond means that six electrons are shared.
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Answer:
Choice 'B'
Explanation:
Choice B => SCl₂ => 2 bonded pairs + 2 nonbonded pairs => 4 electron pairs => AX₄ parent => tetrahedral parent, but the shape is defined only by what's bonded to the central element that is, sulfur bonded to two Cl substrates. The electron pairs will assume positions in space (to minimize repulsion forces) like a regular tetrahedron (AX₄) but will have an AX₂E₂ geometry which is a Bent Geometry.
Suggest searching molecular geometry images online. Look for derivatives of AX₄ geometries. Example: H₂O (AX₂E₂ bent geometry; also a derivative of AX₄ tetrahedral parent geometry).
Water dude lol H²0 (dont you know?) #rhymes
H²o → Hydrogen [The 2 means there are two hydrogen atoms], Oxygen = H²O
Answer:
D. TTACGCCAGG. that would be your answer.
The answer is D, reactant.