180°
linear
The electron pair geometry for CS2 is Linear.
Linear
sp, linear, linear
tetrahedral, if it had three electron groups it would be trigonal planar
linear
The electron pair geometry for CS2 is Linear.
Linear
Cl2 is diatomic (2 atoms) so the only possible geometry is linear
sp, linear, linear
tetrahedral, if it had three electron groups it would be trigonal planar
The moecular geometry is LINEAR The moecular geometry is LINEAR
The electron-pair geometry of CS2 is linear because the Lewis structure is S=C=S. Double bonds act as one electron pair to help determine electron-pair geometries of molecules according to VESPR theory
G. J. Schellekens has written: 'Geometries and linear groups' -- subject(s): Analytic Geometry, Geometry, Analytic
Water is not a linear molecule because of the location of oxygen's electron orbits. The bonding electrons are angled and this results in the shape of the molecule.
Xe has a single bond with each F and also has three lone pairs (extended shell). The electron geometry is trigonal bipyramidal, where the lone pairs of electrons form a trigonal planar geometry and push the F atoms away from each other to form a 180 degree-angle molecular geometry (linear). Non-polar.
The bond angle between the two hydrogen is 104.5 degrees. If it weren't for the two unshared pairs of electrons pushing those atoms into a v-shape, the molecule would be linear.