polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory
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polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory
Summary
polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory is a theory[1]. It draws 57 Wikipedia views per month (theory category, ranking #145 of 323).[2]
Key Facts
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory is credited with the discovery of Kenneth Wade[3].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory is credited with the discovery of Michael Mingos[4].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's instance of is recorded as theory[5].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's instance of is recorded as ruleset[6].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's has use is recorded as electron counting[7].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/08st6r[8].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's facet of is recorded as cluster[9].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as science/Wades-rules[10].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's Römpp online ID is recorded as RD-23-00048[11].
- polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 172289757[12].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include Kenneth Wade[3], a chemist[13], 1932–2014[14], of United Kingdom[15], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society[16], specialised in chemistry[17] and Michael Mingos[4], a chemist[18], b. 1944[19], of United Kingdom[20], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society[21], specialised in cluster[22].
Why It Matters
polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory draws 57 Wikipedia views per month (theory category, ranking #145 of 323).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]