i see
i didnt quiet get it aha now i do. I didnt realise paired electrons could be from the same atom i.e. oxygen has 6 electrons and 3 pairs, no unpaired; Nitrogen has 5 electrons, 1 unpaired electron and 4 paired. So yeh.
i was looking at it as if even though the oxygen has the 2 pairs of electrons, i thought they were unpaired as they werent in a bond or shared aha.
and from ur diagram i see that the unpaired electron from N goes over in the double covalent bond so now N has donated 3 electrons and O 1. Is there a name for this bonding? where one donates more than another. Like i know coordinate covalent is when one species provides BOTH electrons. Here O provides one seemingly.
So we have currently in our NO : O with one unpaired electron and N with no unpaired but only 6 in its outer shell.
Now if that molecule is oxidised the atoms now present are nitrogen with five electrons of which three are unpaired and two oxygen atoms with six electrons of which two are unpaired. An unpaired electron on each oxygen binds to the nitrogen through an unpaired electron. Now there is a single unpaired electron on each oxygen and nitrogen atom. A second bond can form between an oxygen and the nitrogen leaving a single unpaired electron on the other oxygen atom.
i understand it aha yay
cant believe it took me this long to know what an unpaired electron was aha
when we draw O in class its always three pairs of electrons and so i thought it had to loose an electron to have an unpaired electron.
so for a coordinate covalent bond for this syllabus using oxygen:
is that all right?
what in a covalent bond has one species has provided the electron pair for the bond, what separates it from being ionic as in ionic they donate electron pairs :S
or is it just because ion is metal + non metal and coordinate covalent is like an ionic bond for non-metal + non-metals
and lastly: how do u know if an elements/compounds electrons are paired. Like when i was drawing Mg i realised i didnt know whether to put them together or not..
lol and what causes the extra O in ozone to be attracted to the stable O2
aha sorry for all my questions:
just thought id post them in one post instead of multiples and you having to come back
and ive tried researching before asking you theses lol