The answer is 2 since the Oxygen is double bonded with a carbon O=C
Germanium (Ge) has 2 lone pairs of electrons.
Nitrogen trifluoride (NF3) has one lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom.
Two lone pair on the central selenium and three lone pairs on each chlorine. So total of eight lone pairs.
CLO2 (chlorine dioxide) has one lone pair of electrons on the chlorine atom.
There are no lone pairs in the nitrate ion (NO3-). The nitrogen atom forms three sigma bonds with oxygen atoms, leaving no non-bonding pairs of electrons.
There are three lone pairs present in chlorine atom
There are two lone pairs of electrons on the As atom in AsCl3.
Germanium (Ge) has 2 lone pairs of electrons.
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2
NO2 has one lone pair of electrons.
If an atom has five valence electrons, it will have one lone pair of electrons.
Fluorine typically has 3 lone pairs of electrons around it.
There is one lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom.
There are two lone pairs of electrons on the oxygen atom in the Lewis structure of CH3OH.
In an oxygen molecule (O2), each oxygen atom has 3 lone pairs of electrons.
It has one lone pair left.