Chemistry
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781305957404
Author: Steven S. Zumdahl, Susan A. Zumdahl, Donald J. DeCoste
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Help answer the following question, give one biological example of where shape determines function and one non biological example.
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- Do not give handwriting solution.arrow_forwardPlease help with the followingarrow_forwardUse the following information to determine the Lewis structure, find the electron and molecular geometry of the molecule, determine the angle of the molecule, and determine the polarity. If the atoms are not the same, you may assume that the difference in their electronegativities are between 0.4 and 2.0. Atom information: A: 6 valence electrons, CANNOT exceed the octet. Further from fluorine on the periodic table than X. X: 6 valence electrons, CANNOT exceed the octet. Closer to fluorine on the periodic table than A. Molecule: AX,2- Electron Geometry: [Select] Molecular Geometry: [Select ] Bond Angle: [ Select] Polarity: [Select]arrow_forward
- Could someone help me?? The answer to this question must look similar to the example attached. Back ground info: Atoms of different elements combine with one another to form compounds. It is important to be able to explain how atoms actually come together to form these compounds or chemical bonds. One of the three types of bonds is an ionic bond which is a bond between a metal atom and a nonmetal atom, or a cation and an anion. The Octet Rule is the driving force behind ionic bond formation. The octet rule refers to the tendency of atoms to prefer to have eight electrons in the valence shell. When atoms have fewer than eight electrons, they tend to react and form more stable compounds. When discussing the octet rule, we do not consider d or f electrons. Only the s and p electrons are involved in the octet rule, making it useful for the main group elements (elements not in the transition metal or inner-transition metal blocks); an octet in these atoms corresponds to an electron…arrow_forwardCONCEPT MAPPING Marvin started a concept map to demonstrate the properties of water. He lost the map on campus, but luckily you found it. Save the day and complete his map. You'll notice that in the bottom left the document says "paste drawing here." As part of this task, you will be creating a drawing of a molecule of water. Be sure to label the molecule with the types of atoms and the charges that make this molecule polar. ?????arrow_forwardI have to fill out this graph but I'm not sure how to. The options are for the blanks are: Linear (AX2), Trigonal Planar (AX3), Bent (AX2E), tetrahedral (AX4), Trig pyramidal (AX3E), Trig bipyramidal (AX5), SeeSaw (AX4E), T-shaped (AX3E2), square pyramidal (AX5E), square planar (AX4E2), 180, 120, <120, 109.5, 90 and 120, <90 and <120, <90, 90, <180arrow_forward
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