A molecule's polarity is determined by the vector sum of its individual bond dipoles .
- SbCl5: The central antimony atom (Sb) undergoes sp3d hybridisation, resulting in a trigonal bipyramidal geometry . Because all five terminal atoms are identical (chlorine), the three equatorial bond dipoles cancel each other at 120∘, and the two axial bond dipoles cancel each other at 180∘ . Consequently, the net dipole moment (μ) is zero, making it non-polar.
- NO2: This is an odd-electron molecule with a bent geometry . The asymmetrical arrangement prevents bond dipoles from cancelling, resulting in a polar molecule .
- POCl3: The central phosphorus atom is sp3 hybridised (tetrahedral-like). Since the P=O bond dipole differs in magnitude and direction from the three P−Cl bond dipoles, they do not cancel out, making it polar.
- CH2O (Formaldehyde): The carbonyl carbon is sp2 hybridised . The C=O double bond is highly polar due to the higher electronegativity of oxygen relative to carbon . The geometry is trigonal planar, but the different dipoles of C−H and C=O bonds do not cancel, resulting in a significant net dipole moment.