Friday, December 29, 2006

T-Shaped: 3 Shared Pairs and 2 Lone Pairs


This is an example of a t-shaped molecule. A t-shaped molecule has three shared pairs and two lone pairs. The bond angles are either 90 degrees or 180 degrees, but in the case of bromine trifluoride, the bond angle is 86.2 degrees. Bromine trifluoride has 28 valence electrons, and when you do the Lewis dot structure you are left with two lone pairs and three shared pairs around the central atom. Other examples of t-shaped molecules are ClF3 and IF3.

4 comments:

E. Rodriguez said...

Looks good. Good way to show lone pairs. We can use 90 degrees for this one on the test.

Sergio 21 said...

are the angles the same?

Daniel 83 said...

Mark, as Rod. said great way on showing the lone pairs!!!

Jennifer M Sander said...

Hey Mark looks good, helped me understand geometry better, especially with the lone pairs.