Explain the nature of the covalent bond using the bond formation in CH3Cl.

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asked May 8, 2017 in Chemistry by Rohit Singh (61,782 points) 35 133 356

1 Answer

+1 vote
answered May 8, 2017 by Rohit Singh (61,782 points) 35 133 356
 
Best answer

Carbon can neither lose four of its electrons nor gain four electrons as both the processes require extra amount of energy and would make the system unstable. Therefore, it completes its octet by sharing its four electrons with other carbon atoms or with atoms of other elements. The bonds that are formed by sharing electrons are known as covalent bonds. In covalent bonding, both the atoms share the valence electrons, i.e., the shared electrons belong to the valence shells of both the atoms.

Here, carbon requires 4 electrons to complete its octet, while each hydrogen atom requires one electron to complete its duplet. Also, chlorine requires an electron to complete the octet. Therefore, all of these share the electrons and as a result, carbon forms 3 bonds with hydrogen and one with chlorine.

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