Large central atoms from the
third row and beyond in the periodic table (S, P, Cl, Br), may have t
en or twelve electrons in their Lewis structure. These
electron pair domains (regions) are as far apart as possible when in a
trigonal bipyramidal (for five electron pair regions) or
octahedral (six electron pair regions) arrangements.
The octahedral and trigonal pyramidal families of shapes for various combinations of bonding and non-bonding electron pair regions are shown. Recall that because
shape describes positions of the outer atoms in a molecule, this depends on the number of non-bonding electron pairs at the central atom.
AX6 octahedral
 | AX5E square pyramid
 | | AX4E2 square planar
 |
AX5 trigonal bipyramid
 | AX4E see-saw
 | AX3E2 t-shaped
 | AX2E3 linear
 |
Nonbonding electron pairs occupy more space closer to the central atom than bonding electron pairs. This has the result that in molecules with non-bonding pairs at the central atom have smaller AX bond angles.