The electron geometry for silicon tetrafluoride (SiF4) is tetrahedral. This is because the central silicon atom is surrounded by four bonding pairs of electrons from the four fluorine atoms, with no lone pairs on the silicon. The tetrahedral arrangement minimizes electron pair repulsion, resulting in bond angles of approximately 109.5 degrees.
molecular geometry is bent, electron geometry is tetrahedral
The electron geometry (and also, the molecular geometry) of PF5 is Trigonal Bipyramidal.
The electron pair geometry for CS2 is Linear.
The electron-domain geometry of PF6 is Octahedral, since the central atom Phosphorus has an electron pair geometry which is octahedral
It has a triangular planar geometry.
molecular geometry is bent, electron geometry is tetrahedral
The electron geometry (and also, the molecular geometry) of PF5 is Trigonal Bipyramidal.
The molecular geometry of SO2 is bent, and the electron pair geometry is trigonal planar.
The electron pair geometry for CS2 is Linear.
The electron pair geometry of C2H2 is linear.
The electron-domain geometry of PF6 is Octahedral, since the central atom Phosphorus has an electron pair geometry which is octahedral
I'm unsure what the electron pair geometry is but the molecular geometry is Trigonal Planar.
The electron geometry ("Electronic Domain Geometry") for PF3 is tetrahedral. The molecular geometry, on the other hand, is Trigonal Pyramidal.
The cation Si4+.
The electron pair geometry for SO2 is trigonal planar.
electron pair geometry: octahedral molecular geometry: octahedral
The electron geometry of a water molecule is tetrahedral even though the molecular geometry is _____. Bent