Trigonal Bipyramidal
trigonal planar
molecular geometry is bent, electron geometry is tetrahedral
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
Trigonal Bipyramidal
trigonal planar
Yes, PF5 is a Lewis acid because it can accept an electron pair to form a new chemical bond. In this case, the phosphorus atom in PF5 can accept an electron pair from a Lewis base.
SF6 does not have symmetrical geometry, while PF5 does. This is because SF6 has a trigonal bipyramidal molecular geometry, with six bonding pairs and no lone pairs, leading to an overall asymmetrical shape. In contrast, PF5 has a trigonal bipyramidal molecular geometry with five bonding pairs and one lone pair, resulting in a symmetrical shape due to the lone pair occupying one of the equatorial positions.
No, PF5 is not a dipole-dipole molecule. It has a trigonal bipyramidal geometry with fluorine atoms arranged symmetrically around the central phosphorus atom, resulting in a nonpolar molecule.
molecular geometry is bent, electron geometry is tetrahedral
PF5 has a trigonal bipyramidal molecular geometry, with the phosphorus atom at the center surrounded by five fluorine atoms. This geometry consists of three atoms in the same plane and two atoms above and below that plane.
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
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.
electron pair geometry: octahedral molecular geometry: octahedral