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a pair of shared electons means that two atoms are covalently bonded together and share electons to fulfill their outer shell. for example, Cl2 consist of two Cl atoms bonded together. If you look on the Periodic Table you will see Cl is one column away from being a noble gas and having a full outer shell. this means that in Cl's outer shell there are 7 electrons. all atoms want 8 electrons. thus two Cl atoms will bond together and share there lone electon in order to both have an octet ( 8 electons in outer shell and become neutral and stable. electons always come in pairs if there is an odd number of valence electrons (7 in Cl and others in the same column)) this means the atom has one electorn by itself and will bond with another atom in the same situation to share and fill outer shell.

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In a covalent bond, two pairs of electrons are shared between two atoms. This sharing of electrons helps both atoms achieve a more stable electron configuration by filling their outer electron shells. The shared electrons create a bond that holds the atoms together in a molecule.

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10mo ago
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Q: Two pair of shared electron are?
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