Type of bond present in KCl? (Ionic, covalent, or metallic)
What is Ionic
The name of Al2O3?
What is Aluminum Oxide
The hybridization of something with 2 pairs of lone electrons and a double bond connected to it?
The difference in electronegativity for something that is polar?
What is between .4 and 2.0
The general trend of electronegativity?
Type of bond present in Cu? (Ionic, covalent, or metallic)
The formula for Copper (II) oxide?
What is CuO
The electron geometry of H2O?
What is tetrahederal (remember electron geometry ignores the difference lone pairs make)
The type of bond if the difference in electronegativity exceeds 2.0?
What is ionic
The elements that can have an expanded octet?
What is nonmetal elements in the third row and lower (must have an atomic number greater than 12)
The type of bond shares electrons? (Ionic, covalent, metallic)
The name of HI?
What is hydroiodic acid
What is the molecular geometry of H2O and why is it different from the electron geometry?
What is bent and because molecular geometry takes into consideration the effects of lone pairs of electrons
The reason why BCl3 is nonpolar? (Draw it out)
What is formal charge = (number valence electrons) - (number of e- in lone pairs + the number of bonds)
What do the electrons do in a metallic bond?
What is SO42-
The hybridization of a molecule with a triple bond a single bond attached to it?
What is sp hybridization
What is up and polar
As the size of an ion increases, this happens to the lattice energy?
What is it decreases
Which type of bond is the strongest? How does the length compare to the other? (Single, double, triple)
What is triple bond and it is the shortest bond
The name of N2O3?
What is dinitrogen trioxide
The theory that describes how we determine the shape of molecules?
What is VSEPR or Valence-shell electron repulsion theory
The difference between a permanent dipole moment and a temporary dipole moment?
What is permanent dipoles are present in polar molecules while temporary dipole moments can be present in nonpolar molecules because nonpolar molecules can still have polar bonds
The rule of solubility?
What is "like dissolves like"