Title: Chapter 6.2 part 1
1Chapter 6.2 part 1
2Covalent Bonding
- A metal and a nonmetal transfer electrons
- An ionic bond
- Two metals just mix and dont react
- An alloy
- What do two nonmetals do?
- Neither one will give away an electron
- So they share their valence electrons
- This is a covalent bond
3Covalent bonding
- Makes molecules
- Specific atoms joined by sharing electrons
- Two kinds of molecules
- Molecular compound
- Sharing by different elements (ex H2O
- Diatomic molecules
- Two of the same atom
4Diatomic elements
- There are 8 elements that always form molecules
- H2 , N2 , O2 , F2 , Cl2 , Br2 , I2 , and At2
- Oxygen by itself means O2
- The gens and the ines
- 1 7 pattern on the periodic table
51 and 7
6Molecular compounds
- Tend to have low melting and boiling points
- Have a molecular formula which shows type and
number of atoms in a molecule - Not necessarily the lowest ratio
- C6H12O6
- Formula doesnt tell you about how atoms are
arranged
7How does H2 form?
8How does H2 form?
- The nuclei repel
- But they are attracted to electrons
- They share the electrons
- The average distance between nucleii is the bond
length
9Bond Dissociation Energy (bond energy)
- The energy required to break a bond
- C - H 393 kJ/mol C H
- Short bonds are stronger than long bonds
- Double bonds have larger bond dissociation
energies than single - Triple even larger
- C-C 347 kJ
- CC 657 kJ
- CC 908 kJ
10Bond Dissociation Energy
- The larger the bond energy, the harder it is to
break - Large bond energies make chemicals less reactive.
116.2 part 2
- Drawing covalent bond structures
- Electron dot diagrams
- Lewis structures
12Covalent bonds REVIEW
- Nonmetals hold onto their valence electrons.
- They cant give away electrons to bond.
- Still need noble gas configuration.
- Get it by sharing valence electrons with each
other. - By sharing both atoms get to count the electrons
toward noble gas configuration.
13Single Covalent Bond
- A sharing of two valence electrons.
- Only nonmetals and Hydrogen.
- Different from an ionic bond because they
actually form molecules. - Two specific atoms are joined.
- In an ionic solid you cant tell which atom the
electrons moved from or to.
14Covalent bonding Electron dot diagrams diatomic
molecule
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
- Both end with full orbitals
15Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
- Both end with full orbitals
F
F
8 Valence electrons
16Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
- Both end with full orbitals
F
F
8 Valence electrons
17Rules for Lewis Structures
18Lewis structures
- Are models showing the arrangement of atoms and
bonds for molecules with known formulas
19Basic Lewis Structure
- Follows the octet rule
- Works on main block elements
- No one element can have more than 8 electrons
- Some my have less ex., H, He, Li, Be, and B
- a valence electron
- valence electrons main block family s-p
number. - bonds are joined s (electrons)
20Allowed Lewis structures
- All elements must be bonded
- No unpaired electrons
- No atom has more than 8 electrons
21Practice with a 2 atom molecule
- Start with the formula Cl2
- Write the symbols
- Cl Cl
- Give each its valence electrons
22Practice with a 2 atom molecule
- Connect the unpaired electrons to form bonds
- Count electrons bonded count as two for each
atom
23LEWIS STRUCTURES WITH MORE THAN 2 ATOMS
- FIND THE CENTRAL ATOM
- ARRANGE ATOMS
- DRAW VALENCE ELECTRONS ON ATOMS
- CONNECT ATOMS WITH UNPAIRED ELECTRONS
- CHECK THAT OCTET RULE IS FOLLOWED ALL ELECTRONS
ARE PAIRED
24Determine the central atom
- The central atom will be
- Carbon or
- The atom with the lowest electronegativity and a
single atom - If Carbon is present it will always form a
backbone structure - It can never be any element from the first family
s1 - Why?
25Arranging Atoms Around Central Atom or Carbon
Backbone
- Hs are on the outside and evenly distributed
- Special organic functional groups such as
- -OH, -COOH, -NH2, are indicated in the formula
26 PRACTICE WITH LEWIS STRUCTURES WITH MORE THAN 2
ATOMS
- Single bond
- CH3I,
- CH3CH2OH
- multiple bonds
- HCN,
- O2,
- CO2
27 LEWIS STRUCTURES WITH MORE THAN 2 ATOMS
- Coordinate covalent bonds and resonance
structures (O3)
28Coordinate covalent bonds and resonance
structures (O3)
- if connecting single electrons does meet octet
rule - Then use paired electrons from one to make bond
coordinate covalent bond
29Coordinate Covalent Bonds And Resonance Structures
- Single bonds give 8 electrons to central atom but
only 7 to each outside atom
30Resonance structure and coordinate covalent bonds
- Instead complete the bond to two atoms
- The third atom bond comes from the shared
electrons of the central atom
31Resonance structure and coordinate covalent bonds
- Pair up the single electrons
- Use a pair of electrons from the central atom as
the bonding pair - Check the rules.
32RESONANCE STRUCTURES (O3)
- NOTE THAT THE BOND CAN BE DRAWN TO EITHER OXYGEN
- MEASUREMENTS SHOW THAT THE BONDS ARE ALL THE SAME
LENGTH - SO THE DOUBLE BOND RESONATES ACROSS THE MOLECULE
- IT IS NOT A DOUBLE AND SINGLE BOND BUT TWO 1.5
BONDS
33PRACTICE SOME CCBS AND RESONANCE STRUCTURES
34Lewis structures for molecular ions.
- Same rules as for molecular compounds and you are
adding (anions) or removing (cations) - After placing electrons on atoms, add or remove
electrons from the central atom to adjust the
charge on the ion. - Finish drawing the Lewis structure following the
rules for molecular compounds
35Practice for Lewis structures for molecular ions.
36How to show how they formed
- Its like a jigsaw puzzle.
- I have to tell you what the final formula is.
- You put the pieces together to end up with the
right formula. - For example- show how water is formed with
covalent bonds.
37Water
- Each hydrogen has 1 valence electron
- and wants 1 more
- The oxygen has 6 valence electrons
- and wants 2 more
- They share to make each other happy
38Water
- Put the pieces together
- The first hydrogen is happy
- The oxygen still wants one more
H
39Water
- The second hydrogen attaches
- Every atom has full energy levels
H
H
40Multiple Bonds
- Sometimes atoms share more than one pair of
valence electrons. - A double bond is when atoms share two pair (4) of
electrons. - A triple bond is when atoms share three pair (6)
of electrons.
41Carbon dioxide
- CO2 - Carbon is central atom ( I have to tell
you) - Carbon has 4 valence electrons
- Wants 4 more
- Oxygen has 6 valence electrons
- Wants 2 more
C
42Carbon dioxide
- Attaching 1 oxygen leaves the oxygen 1 short and
the carbon 3 short
C
43Carbon dioxide
- Attaching the second oxygen leaves both oxygen 1
short and the carbon 2 short
C
44Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
45Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
46Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
47Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
48Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
49Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
O
50Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
C
O
O
51Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
8 valence electrons
C
O
O
52Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
8 valence electrons
C
O
O
53Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
8 valence electrons
C
O
O
54Polar Bonds
- When the atoms in a bond are the same, the
electrons are shared equally. - This is a nonpolar covalent bond.
- When two different atoms are connected, the
electrons may not be shared equally. - This is a polar covalent bond.
- How do we measure how strong the atoms pull on
electrons?
55Electronegativity
- A measure of how strongly the atoms attract
electrons in a bond. - The bigger the electronegativity difference the
more polar the bond. - Use table 12-3 Pg. 285
- 0.0 - 0.4 Covalent nonpolar
- 0.5 - 1.0 Covalent moderately polar
- 1.0 -2.0 Covalent polar
- gt2.0 Ionic
56How to show a bond is polar
- Isnt a whole charge just a partial charge
- d means a partially positive
- d- means a partially negative
- The Cl pulls harder on the electrons
- The electrons spend more time near the Cl
d
d-
H
Cl
57Polar Molecules
58Polar Molecules
- Molecules with a partially positive end and a
partially negative end - Requires two things to be true
- The molecule must contain polar bonds
- This can be determined from differences in
electronegativity. - Symmetry can not cancel out the effects of the
polar bonds. - Must determine geometry first.
59Polar Molecules
- Symmetrical shapes are those without lone pair on
central atom - Tetrahedral
- Trigonal planar
- Linear
- Will be nonpolar if all the atoms are the same
- Shapes with lone pair on central atom are not
symmetrical - Can be polar even with the same atom
60Is it polar?
- HF
- H2O
- NH3
- CCl4
- CO2
- CH3Cl
61(No Transcript)
62Hydrogen bonding
63Properties of Molecular Compounds
- Made of nonmetals
- Poor or nonconducting as solid, liquid or aqueous
solution - Low melting point
- Two kinds of crystals
- Molecular solids held together by IMF
- Network solids- held together by bonds
- One big molecule (diamond, graphite)