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Deronius November 24th, 2005 17:44

Octet Rule
 
I don't really get how it works. Could someone explain it to me?

RobJim November 25th, 2005 20:29

Electrons cluster around atomic nuclei in distinct shells. These shells are made of subshells, each of which can hold two electrons. The first shell has one s orbital, which holds two. The second and suceeding shells also have three p orbitals, which each hold two. Three p orbitals and an s orbital make eight electrons. An atom tends to be most stable when all four of these orbitals are either empty or full. Therefore, molecules will tend to form with each atom except hydrogen and helium (first period elements without a second shell) having eight outer electrons. This may mean four different bonds (a bond counts as two electrons for each atom in the bond), or maybe some double bonds, or even lone pairs on the atom.

Deronius November 26th, 2005 08:00

Thanks, I think I understand it pretty well now.

Noble December 5th, 2005 23:03

Just a note
 
Just a note to remember,
The presence and workings of subshells is something that is usually covered in higher level chemistry, so as to not confuse members without such knowledge we should explain the old, plain "likes to have a full 8 electrons in a shell, so either loses or gains..." at first, and if the member requires further explaination we should continue from there.


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