Hürriyet: So3 nedir, asit mi baz mı ve bileşiğinin yaygın adı nasıldır? So3 molekül ağırlığı
So3 nedir, asit mi baz mı ve bileşiğinin yaygın adı nasıldır? So3 molekül ağırlığı
SO3 gaz olarak çevrilmektedir. Kükürt trioksit ile meydana gelen bu gaz asidik bir yapıya sahiptir. Bu şekilde doğanın ve havanın kirlenmesine yol açmaktadır. Suyla birleştiğinde ise sülfürik asit ...
15 $\ce {SO3}$ molecule has three double bonded oxygen to the central sulfur atom. Sulfur has $\ce {sp^2}$ hybridization and it has 6 outer electrons which make the bonds with the oxygen. So shouldn't the bond order be 2?
For one thing, $\ce {SO3^ {2-}}$ has two extra electrons, so it's an ion. $\ce {SO3}$ is a neutral molecule. There are a different number of electrons, so they're just different.
Structure of $\ce{SO3}$ (sulfur trioxide): In the molecule, if each oxygen atom shares two electrons with sulfur atom then how does the sulfur atom remain stable? It already has 6 valence electrons...
I've drawn a more correct mechanism for the reaction of dilute $\ce {SO3}$ with water in the liquid phase: $$\ce {SO3 (aq) + 3H2O (l) -> SO4^2- (aq) + 2H3O+ (aq)}$$ $\ce {SO3}$ is a strong electrophile, enough to react quickly with water, which is a relatively weak nucleophile. A water molecule is added to the structure, facilitated by the dislocation of a $\ce {S=O}$ bonding electron pair in ...
Is it $\ce {SO3}$ or $\ce {SO3H+}$? According to what my professor taught me, both $\ce {SO3}$ and $\ce {SO3H+}$ may be the electrophile involved - and mechanisms with both species can be successfully written. I'm looking for some source (s) that confirms the existence of both electrophiles in sulfonation reaction of benzene.