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  1. What is Electronegativity? - Electronegativity is defined as the tendency of an atom participating in a covalent bond to attract the bonding electrons. The elements with high electronegativity are up and to the right of the periodic table.

  2. Electronegativity, symbolized as χ, is the tendency for an atom of a given chemical element to attract shared electrons (or electron density) when forming a chemical bond. An atom's electronegativity is affected by both its atomic number and the distance at which its valence electrons reside from the charged nucleus. The higher the associated ...

  3. Electronegativity is a kind of measure that tells how strongly atoms attract the bonding electrons to them. Its symbol is a Greek letter that looks like an (X). It is directly proportional to the atom’s attraction for the electrons.

  4. Jan 24, 2020 · Electronegativity is the property of an atom which increases with its tendency to attract the electrons of a bond. If two bonded atoms have the same electronegativity values as each other, they share electrons equally in a covalent bond.

  5. Electronegativity is a measure of an atom's ability to attract shared electrons to itself. On the periodic table, electronegativity generally increases as you move from left to right across a period and decreases as you move down a group.

  6. Jan 30, 2023 · Electronegativity is a measure of the tendency of an atom to attract a bonding pair of electrons. The Pauling scale is the most commonly used. Fluorine (the most electronegative element) is assigned a value of 4.0, and values range down to cesium and francium which are the least electronegative at 0.7.

  7. Jul 2, 2024 · Electronegativity, in chemistry, the ability of an atom to attract to itself an electron pair shared with another atom in a chemical bond. The commonly used measure of the electronegativities of chemical elements is the electronegativity scale derived by Linus Pauling in 1932.

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