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Question
Why do halogens have very high values of electron affinity?
Long Answer
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Solution
- Halogens have 7 electrons in their outer shell, needing only one more electron to complete their stable noble gas configuration.
- Because of this, halogens strongly attract an extra electron to attain stability.
- The high effective nuclear charge in halogen atoms pulls the incoming electron strongly.
- When an electron is added, a large amount of energy is released, resulting in very high (maximum negative) electron affinity values.
- The electron affinity decreases down the group because atomic size increases; thus, the attraction for the added electron reduces.
- Fluorine’s electron affinity is slightly less negative than chlorine’s due to its very small size causing high electron density, which repels the added electron a bit.
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