- Isoelectronicity
Two or more molecular entities (
atom s,molecule s,ion s) are described as being isoelectronic [GoldBookRef | file = I03276 | title = isoelectronic] with each other if they have the same number ofvalence electron s "and" the same structure (number and connectivity of atoms), regardless of the nature of the elements involved.Examples
The N
atom and the O+ radicalion are isoelectronic because each has 5 electrons in the outer electronic shell. Similarly, the cations K+, Ca2+, and Sc3+, the anions Cl−, S2−, and P3− are all isolectronic with the Ar atom. In suchmonatomic cases, there is a clear trend in the sizes of such species, withatomic radius decreasing as charge increases.CO, N2 and NO+ are isoelectronic because each have 2 nuclei and 10 valence electrons (4+6, 5+5, and 5+5, respectively).
The uncharged H2C=C=O
molecule and the zwitterionic CH2=N+=N- molecule are isoelectronic.CH3COCH3 and CH3N2CH3 are "not" isoelectronic. They do have the same number of nuclei and the same number of valence electrons, but the atoms' connectivity is different: the first one has both
methyl (CH3) groups attached tocarbonyl 's (CO's) carbon atom, forming atrigonal planar structure: H3C-C(=O)-CH3; the second molecule's structure is linear: H3C-N=N-CH3 and its methyl groups are not connected to the same nitrogen atom.The amino acids
cysteine andserine are also considered isoelectronic.References
ee also
*
Atom
*Molecule
*Ion
*Electron
*Electronic configuration
*Valence bond theory
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