Concept explainers
(a)
Interpretation:
Lewis structures of all the important resonance forms of
Concept introduction:
The steps to draw the Lewis structure of the molecule are as follows:
Step 1: Find the central atom and place the other atoms around it. The atom in a compound which has the lowest group number or lowest electronegativity considered as the central atom.
Step 2: Calculate the total number of valence electrons.
Step 3: Connect the other atoms around the central atoms to the central atom with a single bond and lower the value of valence electrons by 2 of every single bond.
Step 4: Allocate the remaining electrons in pairs so that the octet of each atom is satisfied.
Step 5: Convert the lone pair into a bond pair if required.
When bonds in a molecule can be expressed by different Lewis structures then resonance structures are used to depict the bonding in that molecule. These resonance structures have the same placement of atoms but different locations of bonding and lone pairs of electrons also one resonance form can be converted into another by moving lone pairs to bonding positions, and vice versa.
(b)
Interpretation:
Lewis structures of all the important resonance forms of
Concept introduction:
The steps to draw the Lewis structure of the molecule are as follows:
Step 1: Find the central atom and place the other atoms around it. The atom in a compound which has the lowest group number or lowest electronegativity considered as the central atom.
Step 2: Calculate the total number of valence electrons.
Step 3: Connect the other atoms around the central atoms to the central atom with a single bond and lower the value of valence electrons by 2 of every single bond.
Step 4: Allocate the remaining electrons in pairs so that the octet of each atom is satisfied.
Step 5: Convert the lone pair into a bond pair if required.
When bonds in a molecule can be expressed by different Lewis structures then resonance structures are used to depict the bonding in that molecule. These resonance structures have the same placement of atoms but different locations of bonding and lone pairs of electrons also one resonance form can be converted intoanother by moving lone pairs to bonding positions, and vice versa.
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Chapter 10 Solutions
CHEMISTRY: MOLECULAR NATURE OF MATTER
- Check all molecules that are acids on the list below. H2CO3 HC2H3O2 C6H5NH2 HNO3 NH3arrow_forwardFrom the given compound, choose the proton that best fits each given description. a CH2 CH 2 Cl b с CH2 F Most shielded: (Choose one) Least shielded: (Choose one) Highest chemical shift: (Choose one) Lowest chemical shift: (Choose one) ×arrow_forwardConsider this molecule: How many H atoms are in this molecule? How many different signals could be found in its 1H NMR spectrum? Note: A multiplet is considered one signal.arrow_forward
- For each of the given mass spectrum data, identify whether the compound contains chlorine, bromine, or neither. Compound m/z of M* peak m/z of M + 2 peak ratio of M+ : M + 2 peak Which element is present? A 122 no M + 2 peak not applicable (Choose one) B 78 80 3:1 (Choose one) C 227 229 1:1 (Choose one)arrow_forwardShow transformation from reactant to product, step by step. *see imagearrow_forwardCheck the box if the molecule contains the listed item. *See imagearrow_forward
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