Work out the shape of an SF6 molecule

To work out the shape of the SF6 molecule we can use a simple equation which allows us to work out the number of electron pairs. The equation is (old group + electrons donated +/- charge) / 2. If the charge is positive then take it away and if it is negative then add it on. So for SF6, the molecule is in group 6, each Fluorine atom donates one electron so 6 electrons donated in total, there is no charge so nothing to add or take away. So the number of electron pairs is (6 + 6 + 0) / 2 = 6 electron pairs. There are no double bonds or lone pairs to worry about so the shape is based on an octahedron, so the observed shape of the molecule is octahedral. All the angles in the molecule are 90 degrees.

MW
Answered by Maciej W. Chemistry tutor

3086 Views

See similar Chemistry A Level tutors

Related Chemistry A Level answers

All answers ▸

What happens to reactivity as you go down group 1 in the periodic table?


What shape does XeF4 take?


What is an empirical formula and how do I calculate it?


Explain why fluorine is reactive


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2025 by IXL Learning