Title: CH 2: Polar Covalent Bonds; Acids and Bases
1CH 2 Polar Covalent Bonds Acids and Bases
- Renee Y. Becker
- CHM 2210
- Valencia Community College
2Electronegativity and Bond Polarity
Greater ?EN means greater polarity
3Polar Covalent Bonds
- Polar Covalent Bonds
- Form between a non-metal/non-metal of different
electronegativities
4Polar Molecules
- Polar Molecules
- Just as bonds can be polar, molecules as a whole
can be polar - Net sum of individual bond polarities and
lone-pair contributions -
5Dipole Moment
- Dipole moment, ?, (ionic and covalent)
- Measure of net molecular polarity
- The magnitude of the charge Q at either end of
the molecular dipole times the distance, r,
between the charges - ? Q x r
- Expressed in debyes, D, where
- 1 D 3.336 x 10-30 coulomb meters
6Ionic Character
- Which of the following has the highest ionic
character? - HI
- HBr
- HCl
- HF
- WHY?
7Example 3
- Tell which of the following compounds are likely
to have a dipole moment and show the direction of
each. - a) SF6 b) CHCl3
-
- c) CH2Cl2 d) CH2CH2
8Intermolecular Forces
- Van der Waals forces intermolecular forces as a
whole, all are electrical in origin and result
from the mutual attraction of unlike charge or
mutual repulsion of like charges. - 4 main types
- Dipole-dipole
- Ion-dipole
- Dispersion forces
- Hydrogen bonding
9Dipole-dipole
- Neutral but polar molecules experience
dipole-dipole forces as a result of electrical
interactions among dipoles on neighboring
molecules. - Forces can be attractive or repulsive, depending
on the orientation of the molecules. - c) These forces are weak 3-4 kJ/mol and only
significant if molecules are close
10Ion-dipole
-
- Result of electrical interactions between an
ion and the partial charges on a polar molecule - b) Particularly important in aqueous solutions
of ionic substances such as NaCl, in which polar
water molecules surround the ions
11London Dispersion Forces
- a) Result from the motion of electrons
- b)Â At any given time more electrons may be in a
particular area of the molecule - c)Â Â This gives the molecule an instantaneous
dipole - d)Â Â This short lived dipole can affect the
electron distribution in neighboring molecules
and induce temporary dipoles in them - e) More electrons a molecule has the stronger
the dispersion forces
12Hydrogen Bonding
- a) Attractive interaction between a hydrogen
atom bonded to a very - electronegative atom (O, N, F) and an
unshared electron pair on another electronegative
atom - Hydrogen bonds arise because O-H, N-H, and F-H
bonds are highly polar with partial positive
charge on the hydrogen and partial negative on
the electronegative atom. - Hydrogen has no core electrons to shield its
nucleus and it is small so it can be approached
closely by other molecules - d) The dipole-dipole attraction between the
hydrogen and an unshared electron pair on a
nearby atom is usually strong
13Hydrogen Bonding
- e) Water is able to form a vast 3D network of
hydrogen bonds because each H2O molecule has two
hydrogens and two electron pairs
14Intermolecular Forces
15Example 4
- Identify the likely kinds of intermolecular
forces in the following - A)Â Â HCl
- B) CH3CH3
- C) CH3NH2
- D) Kr
16Example 5
- Of the substances Ar, Cl2, CCl4 and HNO3 which
has - a)Â The largest dipole-dipole forces?
-
- b)Â Â Â The largest hydrogen-bond forces?
-
-
17Resonance
- Only electrons can be moved (usually lone pairs
or pi electrons). - Nuclei positions and bond angles remain the same.
- The number of unpaired electrons remains the
same. - Resonance causes a delocalization of electrical
charge.
18Resonance Example
- The real structure is a resonance hybrid.
- All the bond lengths are the same.
- Each oxygen has a -1/3 electrical charge.
19Major Resonance Form
- has as many octets as possible.
- has as many bonds as possible.
- has the negative charge on the most
electronegative atom. - has as little charge separation as possible.
- The more resonance forms the more stable
20Example 6
- Draw the important resonance forms, label major
and minor - a) H2CCN-
- b) HCONH2
- c) H2COH
- d) H2CNO2-
21 Example 7
Which is the Major Contributor?? Why?
22Arrhenius Acids and Bases
- Acids dissociate in water to give H3O ions.
- Bases dissociate in water to give OH- ions.
- Kw H3O OH- 1.0 x 10-14 at 24C
- pH -log H3O
- Strong acids and bases are 100 dissociated.
23BrØnsted-Lowry Acids and Bases
- Acids can donate a proton
- Bases can accept a proton
- Conjugate acid-base pairs
- Label acid, base, conj. acid, conj. base
24(No Transcript)
25Acid and Base Strength
- Acid dissociation constant, Ka
- Base dissociation constant, Kb
- For conjugate pairs, (Ka)(Kb) Kw
- Spontaneous acid-base reactions proceed from
stronger to weaker
26Determining Relative Acidity
- Electronegativity (different groups)
-
- Size (same groups)
- Resonance stabilization of conjugate base
(oxoacids, HNO3 HNO2)
27Electronegativity
As the bond to H becomes more polarized, H
becomes more positive and the bond is easier to
break.
28Size
- As size increases, the H is more loosely held and
the bond is easier to break. (weak bond strong
acid) - A larger size also stabilizes the anion.
29Resonance
- Delocalization of the negative charge on the
conjugate base will stabilize the anion, so the
substance is a stronger acid. - More resonance structures usually mean greater
stabilization.
30Example 8
Which of the following is the strongest acid
using pKa values?
- NH3 pKa 33 2. CH3OH pKa 15.5
- 3. HCl pKa -2.2 4. CH3COOH pKa 4.74
31Lewis Acids and Bases
- Acids accept electron pairs electrophile
- Bases donate electron pairs nucleophile
Dative or coordinate covalent bond formed
32- Electrophile
- Electron poor
- Could be neutral or partially positive or
positive -
- Nucleophile
- Electron rich
- Could be neutral or partially negative or
negative - Has to have lone pair or pi bond
33(No Transcript)
34Example 9
Which of the following is an electrophile? Why?
1. NH3 2. CH3O- 3. H 4. B-