become expert | help | login
refer a friend - earn nickels!!
 advanced

  Ask & Discuss Questions with Community & Experts

Moderation Team
  500 chars left
Ask community Community Discussion Question: electonegavity
Reply Forum Index -> Lounge originally posted here on IIT-JEE / AIEEE community   
Email  
Author Message
Ankit Agarwal (0)

Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer. 0  [0 rates]

Ankit Agarwal's Avatar

total posts: 1    
Offline
what is a electronegativity
    
edison (8935)

Forum Expert

Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer. 1561  [2126 rates]

edison's Avatar

total posts: 7537    
Offline

 Electronegativity, is a chemical property that describes the tendency of an atom or a functional group to attract electrons towards itself and thus the tendency to form negative ions. An atom's electronegativity is affected by both its atomic number and the distance that its valence electrons reside from the charged nucleus. The higher the associated electronegativity number, the more an element or compound attracts electrons towards it. First proposed by Linus Pauling in 1932 as a development of valence bond theory, it has been shown to correlate with a number of other chemical properties. Electronegativity cannot be directly measured and must be calculated from other atomic or molecular properties. Several methods of calculation have been proposed, and although there may be small differences in the numerical values of the electronegativity, all methods show the same periodic trends between elements.

The most commonly used method of calculation is that originally proposed by Linus Pauling. This gives a dimensionless quantity, commonly referred to as the Pauling scale, on a relative scale running from around 0.7 to 3.98 (hydrogen = 2.20). 
Electronegativity, as it is usually calculated, is not strictly a property of an atom, but rather a property of an atom in a molecule.[3] Properties of a free atom include ionization energy and electron affinity. It is to be expected that the electronegativity of an element will vary with its chemical environment,but it is usually considered to be a transferable property, that is to say that similar values will be valid in a variety of situations.
On the most basic level, electronegativity is determined by factors like the nuclear charge (the more protons an atom has, the more "pull" it will have on negative electrons) and the number/location of other electrons present in the atomic shells (the more electrons an atom has, the farther from the nucleus the valence electrons will be, and as a result the less positive charge they will experience -- both because of their increased distance from the nucleus, and because the other electrons in the lower energy core orbitals will act to shield the valence electrons from the positively charged nucleus).
The opposite of electronegativity is electropositivity: a measure of an element's ability to donate electrons.

A paradox is an argument that starts with apparently acceptable assumptions and leads by apparently valid deductions to an apparent contradiction. Since logic admits no contradictions, either the apparently acceptable assumptions are not acceptable, or the apparently valid
deductions are not valid, or the apparent contradiction is not a contradiction. A paradox moves us to reexamine the argument until we find out what is wrong.
  this reply:   0 points  (with Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0   votes   )     [?]
 
You have to be logged on to rate
  
 
reply Forum Index -> Lounge
Go to: 
Sponsored Links
preparing GATE 2010?
solved, model Papers,study Material
courses from Brilliant. Buy Now !

goiit.com/Brilliant-GATE

preparing GATE ?
online, Brilliant Tutorial courses
solved, model papers. Buy Now!

gateprep.com/GATE

preparing for IAS ?
Brilliant Tutorial's correspondence
Complete course. Buy Online Now !

goiit.com/Brilliant-UPSC-postal

preparing IES ?
solved, model paper, prelim monitor
online, study material. Buy Online!

go4ias.com/IES

preparing for BSNL JTO ?
solved, model paper, rank predictor
online, study material. Buy Online!

go4ias.com/BSNL-JTO