Title: Bonding
1Chapter 8
2- 8.1
- Types of Chemical Bonds
3What is a Bond?
- A force that holds atoms together.
- Why do bonds occur?
- Lower potential energy
- Higher stability.
- Bond energy is the energy required to break a
bond. - Why are compounds formed?
- Because it gives the system the lowest potential
energy.
4Ionic Bonding
- Electrostatic attraction of two ions.
- Ions are formed by the loss or gain of electrons
- An atom with a low ionization energy (easy to
remove e-) reacts with an atom with high electron
affinity (more energy released). - Opposite charges hold the atoms together.
- Metal Nonmetal
5Coulomb's Law
- The energy of interaction between a pair of ions.
- E 2.31 x 10-19 J nm (Q1Q2/r)
- Q is the charge on ions.
- r is the distance between ion centers.
- If charges are opposite, E is negative,
exothermic - Attractive force
- Same charge, positive E, requires energy to bring
them together, endothermic. - Repulsive force
6As the two atoms approach each other..
Energy
0
Internuclear Distance
7The energy begins to decrease
Energy
0
Internuclear Distance
8Until to distance reaches 0.74Å
Energy
0
Internuclear Distance
9And then begins to increase again due to
repulsions.
Energy
0
Internuclear Distance
10Energy
0
Bond Length is measured where there is minimal
energy
Internuclear Distance
11Energy
Bond Energy
0
Internuclear Distance
12Covalent Bonding
- Electrons are shared by atoms.
- Nonpolar covalent bonds equal sharing of
electrons. - Polar covalent bonds unequal sharing of
electrons. - One end is slightly positive, the other negative.
- Indicated using small delta d.
13(No Transcript)
14When no electric field is present the molecules
are randomly oriented.
15-
When the field is turn on, molecules line up..
16 17Electronegativity
- The ability of an atom to attract shared
electrons to itself. - Linus Pauling method
- Imaginary molecule HX
- Expected H-X energy H-H energy X-X
energy 2 - D (H-X) actual - (H-X)expected
18Electronegativity
- D is known for almost every element
- Gives us relative electronegativities of all
elements pg 353 fig 8.3. - Period Trends Increase left to right.
- Noble gases are excluded
- Group Trends Decreases as you go down a group.
19Electronegativity
- Difference in electronegativity between atoms
will determine the type of bond.
Electroneg. 0 0.3 1.7
4.0 difference
Nonpolar Covalent
Bond Type
20Covalent Character decreases Ionic Character
increases
Electroneg. 0 0.3 1.7
4.0 difference
Nonpolar Covalent
21- 8.3
- Bond Polarity
- And
- Dipole Moments
22Dipole Moments
- All bonds can be classified by their polarity.
- How they are positioned in a molecule can result
in molecular polarity. - a negative charge and a positive charge is
dipolar (two poles), or said to have a dipole
moment.
23How It is drawn
24Which Molecules Have Them?
- Any two atom molecule with a polar bond.
- With three or more atoms there are two
considerations. - There must be a polar bond.
- Geometry cant cancel it out.
25Geometry and polarity
- Three shapes will cancel them out.
- Linear
26Geometry and polarity
- Three shapes will cancel them out.
- Planar triangles
120º
27Geometry and polarity
- Three shapes will cancel them out.
- Tetrahedral
28Geometry and polarity
29Geometry and polarity
- Others dont cancel
- Trigonal Pyramidal
30- 8.4
- Ions
- Electron Configurations
- And Sizes
-
31Ions
- Atoms tend to react to form noble gas
configuration. - Metals lose electrons to form cations
- Nonmetals can share electrons in covalent bonds.
Or they can gain electrons to form anions.
32Ionic Compounds
- We mean the solid crystal.
- Ions align themselves to maximize attractions
between opposite charges, and to minimize
repulsion between like ions. - Can stabilize ions that would be unstable as a
gas. - Pictured in the margin of pg 358.
- React to achieve noble gas configuration
33Size of ions
- Various factors affect the size of ions
- Effective nuclear charge
- Loss of (or filling of) a sublevel or energy
level - Shielding effect
- Cations are smaller than the atoms they came
from. - Anions are larger.
34Size of ions
- Period Trends across a row they get smaller,
and then suddenly larger. - First half are cations
- Second half are anions.
- Group Trends Ion size increases down a group.
N-3
O-2
F-1
Li1
Be2
B3
C4
35Size of Isoelectronic ions
- Iso - same
- Isoelectronic ions have the same of electrons
- Al3, Mg2, Na1, Ne, F-1, O-2, and N-3
- All have 10 electrons.
- All have the configuration 1s22s22p6
36Size of Isoelectronic ions
- Positive ions have more protons so they are
smaller. - Size decreases as the nuclear charge increases
N-3
O-2
F-1
Ne
Na1
Al3
Mg2
37- 8.5
- Formation of Binary
- Ionic Compounds
-
38Forming Ionic Compounds
- Lattice Energy - the energy released when one
mole of ionic crystal is formed from its ions. - M(g) X-(g) MX(s)
- Exothermic, negative
39Forming Ionic Compounds
- Ionic crystals have a lower potential energy and
greater stability than the individual ions. - The formation of an ionic compound consists of
several intermediate steps and each step involves
energy.
40Forming Ionic Compounds
- General rule
- Energy is absorbed to break bonds and released to
form bonds. - Energy is a state function so we can get from
reactants to products in a round about way.
41Na(s) ½F2(g) NaF(s)
- First sublime Na Na(s) Na(g)
DH 109 kJ/mol - Ionize Na(g) Na(g) Na(g) e- Ei
495 kJ/mol - Dissociation F2 Bond ½F2(g) F(g)
- Ed 77 kJ/mol
- Affinity of F F(g) e-
F-(g) Ea -328 kJ/mol
42Na(s) ½F2(g) NaF(s)
- Lattice energy Na(g) F-(g) NaF(s) EL
-923 kJ/mol - OVERALL RXN AND ENERGY
- Na(s) ½F2(g) NaF(s)
- ?E - 570 kJ/mole
43Calculating Lattice Energy
- Lattice Energy k(Q1Q2 / r)
- k is a constant that depends on the structure of
the crystal. - Due to a variable k value general trends are
used to understand lattice energy - As ionization energy ? lattice energy ?
- As the charge Q ? lattice energy ?
44- 8.6
- Partial Ionic character of Covalent Bonds
-
45Partial Ionic Character
- To calculate the ionic character
- Compare measured dipole of XY
- bonds to the calculated dipole of XY-
- for the completely ionic case.
- dipole Measured X-Y x 100
Calculated XY-
46As the difference in Electronegativity increases
75
Ionic Character
50
25
the Ionic Character increases
Electronegativity difference
47You Can Not Reach 100 Ionic Character?
- What about polyatomic ions?
- An ionic compound will be defined as any
substance that conducts electricity when melted. - Also use the generic term salt.
48- 8.8
- Covalent Bond Energies
- And
- Chemical Reactions
-
49Covalent Bond Energies
- Energy is also involved in the formation of
covalent compounds in the form of bonds breaking
and bonds forming. - The bond energy (required to break bonds) is
inversely proportional to bond length.
50Covalent Bond Energies
- Bond length is directly proportional to atomic
size. (page 373) - single bond, 1 pair of e- shared.
- double bond, 2 pair of e- shared.
- triple bond, 3 pair of e- shared.
- More bonds, shorter bond length.
- Bond energy and the enthalpy (?H) can be
calculated.
51Using Bond Energies
- We can find change in enthalpy, DH, for a
reaction. - It takes energy to break bonds, endothermic, ().
- We use energy to form bonds, exothermic, (-).
- ?H ? D (bonds broken) - ? D (bonds formed)
52Find the energy for this
2 CH2 CHCH3
2NH3
O2
2 CH2 CHC º N
6 H2O
C-H 413 kJ/mol
O-H 467 kJ/mol
CC 614kJ/mol
OO 495 kJ/mol
N-H 391 kJ/mol
CºN 891 kJ/mol
C-C 347 kJ/mol
53- 8.9
- The Localized Electron Bonding Model
-
54Localized Electron Model
- A molecule is composed of atoms that are bound
together by sharing pairs of electrons using the
atomic orbitals of the bound atoms. - Three Parts
- Valence electrons using Lewis structures
- Prediction of geometry using VSEPR
- Description of the types of orbitals (Chapt 9)
55 56Lewis Structure
- Shows how the valence electrons are arranged.
- One dot for each valence electron.
- A stable compound has all its atoms with a noble
gas configuration. - Hydrogen follows the duet rule.
- The rest follow the octet rule.
- Bonding pair is the one between the symbols.
57Rules
- Count up all valence e- for all atoms.
- Arrange the satellite atoms around the central
atom (least electronegative) connected by a
single dashed line. (each line represents two
electrons) - Place the rest of the valence e- around the
satellite atoms to fill the octet rule (except
H). - COUNT and CHECK!!!
- If more valence e- are needed use multiple bonds.
- If electrons are left over place around the
central atom.
58A useful equations
- (happy-have) / 2 bonds
- POCl3
- SO4-2
- SO3-2
- PO4-2
- SCl2
59- 8.11
- Exceptions
- to the
- Octet Rule
-
60Exceptions to the octet
- The second row elements, C, N, O, and F should
always follow octet rule. - The second row elements B and Be often have fewer
than 8 electrons. These compounds are very
reactive.
61Exceptions to the octet
- The octet rule because their valence orbitals (2s
and 2p) will only hold 8 electrons. - Third row elements and beyond will meet the octet
rule and often exceed 8 electrons using empty d
orbitals.
62Exceptions to the octet
- When we must exceed the octet, extra electrons go
on central atom. - ClF3
- XeO3
- ICl4-
- BeCl2
63 64Resonance
- Sometimes there is more than one valid structure
for an molecule or ion. - NO3-
65Resonance
- NO2-
- Localized electron model is based on pairs of
electrons, doesnt deal with odd numbers.
66Formal Charge
- For molecules and polyatomic ions that exceed the
octet there are several different structures. - Use charges on atoms to help decide which one is
most predominant. - Trying to use the oxidation numbers to put
charges on atoms in molecules doesnt work.
67Formal Charge
- Formal Charge
- ( valence e- on free atom)
- - (valence e- assigned)
- Valence e- assigned
- (number of lone pair electrons)
- ½ (number of shared electrons)
68Formal Charge
69Formal Charge
- SO4-2
- Valence e- assigned to each O
- 6 ½(2) 7
- Formal Charge 6 7 -1
- The formal charge on each oxygen is -1
70Formal Charge
- SO4-2
- Valence e- assigned to each S
- 0 ½(8) 4
- Formal Charge 6 4 2
- The formal charge on each Sulfur is 2
71Formal Charge
72Formal Charge
- SO4-2
- Valence e- assigned to single bond O
- 6 ½(2) 7
- Formal Charge 6 7 -1
- --------------------------------------------------
----- - Valence e- assigned to double bond O
- 4 ½(4) 6
- Formal Charge 6 6 0
73Formal Charge
- SO4-2
- Valence e- assigned to each S
- 0 ½(12) 6
- Formal Charge 6 6 0
74Formal Charges
- Atoms in molecules try to achieve a formal charge
as close to zero as possible. - This resonance structure is the most probable one
75Examples
76- 8.13
- Molecular Structure
- The VSEPR Model
-
77VSEPR
- Lewis structures tell us how the atoms are
connected to each other. - They dont tell us anything about shape.
- The shape of a molecule can greatly affect its
properties. - Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory
allows us to predict geometry
78VSEPR
- Molecules take a shape that puts electron pairs
as far away from each other as possible. - Have to draw the Lewis structure to determine
- electron pairs
- bonding
- nonbonding lone pair
- Lone pair take more space.
- Multiple bonds count as one pair.
79VSEPR
- The number of pairs determines
- bond angles
- underlying structure
- The number of atoms determines
- actual shape
80VSEPR
81Actual shape
Non-BondingPairs
ElectronPairs
BondingPairs
Shape
2
2
0
linear
3
3
0
trigonal planar
3
2
1
bent
4
4
0
tetrahedral
4
3
1
trigonal pyramidal
4
2
2
bent
82Actual Shape
Non-BondingPairs
ElectronPairs
BondingPairs
Shape
5
5
0
trigonal bipyrimidal
5
4
1
See-saw
5
3
2
T-shaped
5
2
3
linear
83Actual Shape
Non-BondingPairs
ElectronPairs
BondingPairs
Shape
6
6
0
Octahedral
6
5
1
Square Pyramidal
6
4
2
Square Planar
6
3
3
T-shaped
6
2
1
linear
84No central atom
- You can predict the geometry of each angle.
- Just build it piece by piece.
85How well does it work?
- Does an outstanding job for such a simple model.
- Predictions are almost always accurate.
- Like all simple models, it has exceptions.