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Kaplan says: H - Te - H bond angles is closest to 109.5 degrees, while on wikipedia it says 90 degrees. Who to trust?
Kaplan is correct. Te has 6 val e-, 2 is spent already so it has 4 val e- left. That also means each 2e- goes to 1 orbital, hence it is a bent or at most a tetrahedral config.Kaplan says: H - Te - H bond angles is closest to 109.5 degrees, while on wikipedia it says 90 degrees. Who to trust?
Kaplan says: H - Te - H bond angles is closest to 109.5 degrees, while on wikipedia it says 90 degrees. Who to trust?
Just think bout H2O, "Te" and "O" are in same group, then share same properties.
angles will be close to 109 degrees.
the formula for this shape is AX2E2...Just like water it has 2 bonds and 2 lone pairs, thus the structure is identical to being tetrahedral (sp3), thus it has to be 109.5 degrees.
Just like the profs always say, don't always trust wiki...you can use it, but never quote it for a report 😛.
what's the bond anglees for HCl??? its one bonding with 3 lonepairs.