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In Chemistry / High School | 2014-05-15

I don't understand this. In a bond between an atom of carbon and an atom of fluorine, the fluorine atom has a?

A. weaker attraction for electrons
B. stronger attraction for electrons
C. smaller number of first-shell electrons
D. larger number of first-shell electrons

Asked by JackTesser

Answer (2)

The correct answer is B.
Look into period table of elements at electronegativity. Electronegativity of carbon is 2.5 and of fluorine 4.0. Electronegativity is a strenght/ability to attract electrons.
Fluorine eletronegativity is much higher so it's atom has stronger attraction of electrons.

Answered by marmal | 2024-06-10

In a bond between carbon and fluorine, fluorine has a stronger attraction for electrons due to its higher electronegativity of 4.0 compared to carbon's 2.5. This means that in the bond, fluorine attracts the shared electrons more strongly. Therefore, the correct answer is B.
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Answered by marmal | 2024-10-02