LogicalAcid
- 137
- 0
The electronegativity of Oxygen is higher than that of H, thus the electrons tend to stay a little more on the oxygens electron orbitals, right?
Yanick said:Just to expand on what Borek has said.
Why is carbon dioxide not polar while water is polar (in terms of net dipole not polarity of individual bonds)?
[/URL]Redbelly98 said:CO2 is a linear molecule; the two polar bonds point in opposite directions, and cancel each other out.
Since H20 is a bent molecule, the two polar bonds don't cancel each other.
EDIT:
Here's an image of a water molecule: the left side is more negative than the right side, resulting in an overall dipole moment for the molecule:
[URL]http://bioweb.wku.edu/courses/biol115/Wyatt/water1.gif
LogicalAcid said:I see, thank you
Borek said:Just in case you only think you see - what is geometry of both molecules? CO2? H2O?
Yanick said:Do you own a General Chemistry text? I would suggest purchasing one, these are things that are pretty clearly explained in the text that I own.
As far as your current question:
http://www.chem.purdue.edu/gchelp/vsepr/
Yanick said:Wait, you go to middle school and you're trying to learn college level general chemistry?