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Yes, water is a bend molecule with a bond angle of about 105 degrees. They are described as bent planar (or V shaped)
in water there are two bond pairs and two lone pairs where as in CH4 there are are four bond pairs nad no lone pair. in ch4 there is only bond pair to bond pair repulsion but in water there are three types of repulsions, lone to lone (greatest repulsion), lone to bond ( lesser repulsion ) and bond to bond ( the least repulsion) , therefore due to the presence of two lone pairs in water the bond pairs are repelled with greater force and they get compressed, reducing the ideal bond angle from 109.5 to 104.5 on the other hand, ch4 has only bond pairs and they dont repel each other that strongly so its angle is greater n its 109.5..
A trigonal planar molecule such as sulfur trioxide (SO3) or boron trihydride (BH3) has a trigonal planar shape. Trigonal pyramidal molecules such as ammonia (NH3) have bond angle closer to 107 degrees.
No, the bond angle for linear structure is 180 degrees.
ClO3 has the smaller bond angle than ClO4
The lone pair - OH bond repulsion in water is greater than the OH bond- OH bond repulsion. In methane all of the bonds are the same so it has perfect tetrahedral symmetry. This is VSEPR theory
hydrogen bond bonds water molecules with other water molecules.
Covalent
The water molecule's bond angle is about 104.45 degrees.
The bond between water molecules is called the hydrogen bond.
Yes, water is a bend molecule with a bond angle of about 105 degrees. They are described as bent planar (or V shaped)
No. methane is not soluble in water, as methane is a non-polar hydrocarbon and water is a polar solvent.
A hydrogen bond.
The bond length is equal to the linear distance between the nuclei of the bonding atoms. The bond angle is equal to the angle between any two consecutive bonds in a molecule or ion. Bond angles of molecules and ions are usually determined by using the VSEPR theory.
The bond between water molecules is known as a hydrogen bond.
covalent bond
Cohesive bond