Title: Chemical Bonding and Molecular Architecture
1Chemical Bonding and Molecular Architecture
- Structure and Shapes of Chemicals
2Bonds
- Forces that hold groups of atoms together and
make them function as a unit.
3Bond Energy
- It is the energy required to break or released in
making a bond. - It gives us information about the strength of a
bonding interaction. - Ionic bondsstrong attractions between
oppositely charged ions - Covalent bondsattraction between non-metal
atoms as both atoms share electrons
4Bond Length
- The distance where the system energy is a
minimum.
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6Ionic Bonds
- Formed from electrostatic attractions of closely
packed, oppositely charged ions. - Formed when an atom that easily loses electrons
reacts with one that has a high electron affinity.
7Ionic Configuration and Size
- Ions are formed when electrons are gained or lost
from an atom. The gain or loss follows the
pattern called the octet rule, that an atom
forms an ion in which it attains the same
electron configuration as the nearest noble gas.
Most metals therefore lose electrons, and as a
result get smaller. The trend is greater ,
smaller size. - Likewise, nonmetals gain electrons to form ions,
thus increasing in size by the opposite rule to
metals.
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9Isoelectronic Ions
- Ions containing the the same number of
electrons, due to attaining the configuration of
the same noble gas - (O2?, F?, Na, Mg2, Al3)
- All attain to Ne
- O2??gt F? gt Na gt Mg2 gt Al3
- largest
smallest
10Electronegativity
- The ability of an atom in a molecule to attract
shared electrons to itself. - Periodic trend increases across the table to the
halogen column. Decreases down a group. Least
at Cs (0.7), greatest at F (4.0).
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12Polarity
- A molecule, such as HF, that has a center of
positive charge and a center of negative charge
is said to be polar, or to have a dipole moment.
Polar bonds shown as arrow with point toward
negative pole, toward the positive pole
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15Electronegativity and Polarity of Bonds
- Subtract lower EN from higher
- EN Difference Ionic Character Type of
Bond - 0 0 Nonpolar Covalent
- 0.1-0.5 1-5 Slightly polar covalent
- 0.6-1.5 6-40 Polar Covalent
- gt 1.5 over 40 Ionic
- Compounds with over 50 ionic character are
considered to be totally ionic solids. These
compounds are often called salts.
16Achieving Noble Gas Electron Configurations (NGEC)
- Two nonmetals react They share electrons to
achieve NGEC. - A nonmetal and a representative group metal
react (ionic compound) The valence orbitals of
the metal are emptied to achieve NGEC. The
valence electron configuration of the nonmetal
achieves NGEC.
17Binary Ionic--Lattice Energy
- The change in energy when separated gaseous ions
are packed together to form an ionic solid. - M(g) X?(g) ? MX(s)
- Lattice energy is negative (exothermic) from the
point of view of the system.
18Formation of an Ionic Solid
- 1. Sublimation of the solid metal
- M(s) ? M(g) endothermic
- 2. Ionization of the metal atoms
- M(g) ? M(g) e? endothermic
- 3. Dissociation of the nonmetal
- 1/2X2(g) ? X(g) endothermic
- 4. Formation of X? ions in the gas phase
- X(g) e? ? X?(g) exothermic
- 5. Formation of the solid MX
- M(g) X?(g) ? MX(s) quite exothermic
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20Homework!!
21Covalent Chemical Bonds
- Happen when collections of atoms are more stable
than the separate atoms. They provide a method
for dividing up energy when stable molecules are
formed from atoms. - Covalent bonds are due to shared electron pairs.
One pair shared is a single bond, two makes a
double bond, three make a triple bond. - As bond order increases (single, double, triple),
bond length shortens
22Bond Energies
- Bond breaking requires energy (endothermic).
- Bond formation releases energy (exothermic).
- ?H ?D(bonds broken) ? ?D(bonds formed)
energy required
energy released
23Example 8.5
24Localized 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. - Two types of electron pairs bonding pairs and
lone pairs. Bonding pairs are linkages between
atoms, lone pairs are electrons solely owned by
an atom.
25Localized Electron Model
- Elements of the Model
- 1. Description of valence electron arrangement
(Lewis structure). - 2. Prediction of geometry (VSEPR model).
- 3. Description of atomic orbital types used to
share electrons or hold lone pairs.
26Lewis Structure
- Shows how valence electrons are arranged among
atoms in a molecule. - Reflects central idea that stability of a
compound relates to noble gas electron
configuration.
27Comments About the Octet Rule
- 2nd row elements C, N, O, F observe the octet
rule. - 2nd row elements B and Be often have fewer than 8
electrons around themselves - they are very
reactive. - 3rd row and heavier elements CAN exceed the octet
rule using empty valence d orbitals. - When writing Lewis structures, satisfy octets
first, then place electrons around elements
having available d orbitals.
28Rules for Drawing Lewis Structures
- Add up all of the valence electrons for the atoms
involved in the molecule. In polyatomic ions,
subtract electrons for a charge, add for a -
charge - Select a most likely central atom and arrange
other atoms around it. Place pairs of electrons
between atoms. - Arrange the remaining electrons around external
atoms first. If the central atom is not
satisfied, form double or triple bonds to make
the molecule work.
29Example 8.6
30Resonance
- Occurs when more than one valid Lewis structure
can be written for a particular molecule. - These are resonance structures. The actual
structure is an average of the resonance
structures.
31Example 8.9
32Homework 8b
- p. 397ff 31, 36, 39, 42, 50, 57
33Molecular Architecture
- The structure of a molecule is important in how
it reacts and to its physical properties - Once the Lewis structure of a molecule is
determined, the shape of the molecule then can be
predicted according to the VSEPR model.
34VSEPR Model
- The structure around a given atom is determined
principally by minimizing electron pair
repulsions.
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36Predicting a VSEPR Structure
- 1. Draw Lewis structure.
- 2. Count pairs, both bonding and lone pairs
around the central atom. - 3. Determine positions of atoms from the way
electron pairs are shared. - 4. Determine the name of molecular structure from
the number of bonding and lone pairs and their
necessary arrangements. Remember that lone pairs
prefer to be at 120º or greater from each other.
37Sample 8.12
38Sample 8.13
39Sample 8.14
40Homework 8c
- p. 399ff 59, 62, 73, 78, 79, 91
41Hybridization
- The mixing of atomic orbitals to form special
orbitals for bonding. - The atoms are responding as needed to give the
minimum energy for the molecule. - To determine hybridization, count lone and
bonding pairs, but count multiple bonds only
once.
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47- A sigma (?) bond centers along the internuclear
axis. - A pi (?) bond occupies the space above and below
the internuclear axis.
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52The Localized Electron Model
- Draw the Lewis structure(s)
- Determine the arrangement of electron pairs
(VSEPR model). - Specify the necessary hybrid orbitals.
53Sample 9.1,2
54Sample 9.3,4,5
55Molecular Orbitals (MO)
- Analagous to atomic orbitals for atoms, MOs are
the quantum mechanical solutions to the
organization of valence electrons in molecules.
56Types of MOs
- bonding lower in energy than the atomic
orbitals from which it is composed. - antibonding higher in energy than the atomic
orbitals from which it is composed.
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58Bond Order (BO)
- Difference between the number of bonding
electrons and number of antibonding electrons
divided by two.
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60Find bond order and magnetic properties for
He22, F2-2, O2-
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62Paramagnetism
- unpaired electrons
- attracted to induced magnetic field
- much stronger than diamagnetism
63Outcomes of MO Model
- 1. As bond order increases, bond energy increases
and bond length decreases. - 2. Bond order is not absolutely associated with a
particular bond energy. - 3. N2 has a triple bond, and a correspondingly
high bond energy. - 4. O2 is paramagnetic. This is predicted by the
MO model, not by the LE model, which predicts
diamagnetism.
64Combining LE and MO Models
- ? bonds can be described as being localized.
- ? bonding must be treated as being delocalized.
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66Homework 9
- p. 432ff 5, 8, 11, 17, 18, 22, 25, 33, 37