Title: Chapter 10 Chemical Bonding
1Chapter 10ChemicalBonding
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3LEWIS STRUCTURES OF ATOMS
- Metals form cations and nonmetals form anions to
attain a stable valence electron structure. - These rearrangements occur by losing, gaining or
sharing electrons. - The Lewis structure of an atom is a
representation that shows the valence electrons
for that atom. - Valence electrons the electrons that occupy the
outermost energy level of an atom. - Valence electrons are responsible for the
electron activity that occurs to form chemical
bonds.
4The Lewis structure of an atom uses dots to show
the valence electrons of atoms.
B
2s22p1
The number of dots equals the number of s and p
electrons in the atoms outermost shell.
5Lewis Structures of the first 20 elements
Notice that Cs e- config is 2s22p2.
6CHEMICAL BONDING
- Atoms will do one of three things to get to a
noble gas electron configuration - 1. Take electrons from another atom
- 2. Give electrons to another atom
- 3. Share electrons with atom(s)
- In choices 1 2 cause ions to form, then ionic
bonds - In choice 3 sharing electrons results in
covalent bonds - With the exception of hydrogen helium, this
structure consists of eight electrons in the
outermost energy level (The Octet Rule)
7The Ionic Bond
- Cations () have given up e-s and anions (-) have
gained e-s, and now have opposite electrical
charges - Results in strong electrostatic force of
attraction - All cations and anions exist in crystal lattices,
defined geometric structures with repeating 3-D
pattern
8The 3s electron of sodium transfers to the 3p
orbital of chlorine.
The force holding Na and Cl- together is an
ionic bond.
Lewis representation of sodium chloride formation.
9The forces holding Mg2 and two Cl- together are
ionic bonds.
Two 3s electrons of magnesium transfer to the 3p
orbitals of two chlorine atoms.
A magnesium ion (Mg2) and two chloride ions
(Cl-) are formed.
10NaCl is made up of cubic crystals.
In the crystal each sodium ion is surrounded by
six chloride ions.
11In the crystal each chloride ion is surrounded by
six sodium ions.
12The ratio of Na to Cl- is 11
There is no molecule of NaCl
13The Ionic Bond
- Using your Periodic Table, determine the cation
and anion each atom is likely to form, then write
the Lewis structures and made the compounds.
Finish by writing the compounds chemical
formula. - Practice Al F, Mg O, Na O, Na
- N, Al O
14A sodium ion is smaller than a sodium atom
because
(1) the sodium atom has lost its outermost
electron.
(2) the 10 remaining electrons are now attracted
by 11 protons and are drawn closer to the nucleus.
15A chloride ion is larger than a chloride atom
because
(1) the chlorine atom has gained an electron
and now has 18 electrons and 17 protons.
(2) The nuclear attraction on each electron has
decreased, allowing the chlorine to expand.
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17Transition Metals form cations a little
different
- Transition metals lose their s electrons first,
because they are in the highest principle energy
level, then they lose their d electrons. - Zn ? Zn2 2 e- Cu ? Cu 1e-
- Ar4s23d10?Ar3d10 Ar4s13d10?Ar3d10
18COVALENT BONDING
- A covalent bond consists of a pair of electrons
shared between two atoms. - In the millions of chemical compounds that exist,
the covalent bond is the predominant chemical
bond. - Substances which covalently bond exist as
molecules.
19Carbon dioxide bonds covalently. It exists as
individually bonded covalent molecules containing
one carbon and two oxygen atoms.
20The term molecule is not used when referring to
ionic substances.
Instead they are called Formula Units.
Sodium chloride bonds ionically. It consists of
a large aggregate of positive and negative ions.
No molecules of NaCl exist.
21COVALENT BONDING
- Nonmetal Atoms have deficiency of electrons in
outermost shell and want to gain electrons to get
full shell - Since two nonmetal atoms both want more
electrons, they will share electrons to get full
shell - H has 1 e- and wants 2
- Cl has 7 e-s and wants 8
- Both satisfied if they share a pair of electrons
between them - Each contributes 1 e- to the pair and each gets
to share the 2 e-s in the pair - H has 2 e-s and Cl has 8 e-s and they are HAPPY
22COVALENT BONDING
- IMPORTANT in giving e-s to be shared, atom
actually gains e-s - The number of e-s an atom contributes to be
shared is equal to the number of e-s it needs to
have an octet! (or a full shell) - A pair of shared e-s is called a covalent bond
- 1 pair of e-s between two atoms single bond
- 2 pairs of e-s betwn two atoms double bond
- 3 pairs
triple bond
23LEWIS STRUCTURES OF COMPOUNDS
- In writing Lewis structures, the most important
consideration for forming a stable compound is
that the atoms attain a noble gas configuration. - The most difficult part of writing Lewis
structures is determining the arrangement of the
atoms in a molecule or an ion. - In simple molecules with more than two atoms, one
atom will be the central atom surrounded by the
other atoms.
24Cl2O has two possible arrangements.
The two chlorines can be bonded to each other.
Cl-Cl-O
The two chlorines can be bonded to oxygen.
Cl-O-Cl
Usually the single atom will be the central atom.
(also usually the leftist or lowest on the
Periodic Table)
25Valence Electrons of Group A Elements
Atom Group Valence Electrons
Cl VIIA 7
H IA 1
C IVA 4
N VA 5
S VIA 6
P VA 5
I VIIA 7
26Procedures for WritingLewis Structures
- Step 1. Obtain the total number of valence
electrons to be used in the structure by adding
the number of valence electrons in all the atoms
in the molecule or ion. - If you are writing the structure of an ion, add
one electron for each negative charge or subtract
one electron for each positive charge on the ion. - Step 2. Write the skeletal arrangement of the
atoms and connect them with a single covalent
bond (two dots or one dash). Choose the leftist
or lowest element as the central atom. Arrange
terminal atoms symmetrically around the central
atom. - Hydrogen, which contains only one bonding
electron, can form only one covalent bond. - Oxygen atoms usually have a maximum of two
covalent bonds (two single bonds, or one double
bond).
27Procedures for WritingLewis Structures
- Step 3. Subtract two electrons for each single
bond you used in Step 2 from the total number of
electrons calculated in Step 1. - This gives you the net number of electrons
available for completing the structure by adding
lone pairs of electrons to the terminal atoms
until they have an octet. Any remaining
electrons become lone pairs on the central atom.
28Procedures for WritingLewis Structures
- Step 4. Check that each atom is satisfied. If
one atom doesnt have an octet, move lone pairs
of electrons in as bond pairs to make multiple
covalent bonds. Do this symmetrically. - Step 5. Check the total number of electrons in
the structure and make sure it matches the number
of valence electrons in step 1. - (Also learn the number of bonds an atom prefers
to make - H and F always 1 bond and terminal atom C mostly
4 (and usually a central atom) halogens mostly
1 O and S mostly 2 N and P mostly 3)
29Write the Lewis structure for H2O. The total
number of valence electrons is eight, two from
the two hydrogen atoms and six from the oxygen
atom. The two hydrogen atoms are connected to the
oxygen atom which is central. Write the skeletal
structure
Place two dots between the hydrogen and oxygen
atoms to form the covalent bonds. Subtract the
four electrons used from eight valence electrons
to obtain four electrons yet to be used around
the oxygen. (Why not the H?)
30Distribute the four remaining electrons in lone
pairs around the oxygen atom. (Hydrogen atoms
cannot accommodate any more electrons. NEVER
have more than 1 bond to H or have lone pairs
around H.)
The shape of the molecule is not shown by the
Lewis structure.
These arrangements are Lewis structures because
each atom has a noble gas electron structure.
31Covalent bonding with equal sharing of electrons
occurs in diatomic molecules formed from one
element.
chlorine
iodine
nitrogen
hydrogen
A dash may replace a pair of dots that represent
a bond
H-H
32Practice Lewis Structures
- Look in packet for practice sheet and work with
one partner to draw the Lewis structures on
separate paper. - Bring them up to show on the document camera.
33Complex Lewis Structures
- Do the Lewis structures for the following with a
partner - HCN, CH4, SO3, CH3OH, SF6, PCl3, NO2
- Some will have EXCEPTIONS to the Octet Rule.
34Complex Lewis Structures
- Exceptions to Octet Rule
- Expanded valence shell any central atom with
outermost e-s in period 3 or below has d orbitals
available for bonding and can hold 10 or 12 e-s - Electron deficient or free radical structures
have less than 8 e-s and will be very reactive
compounds
35Complex Lewis Structures
- There are some molecules and polyatomic ions for
which no single Lewis structure consistent with
all characteristics and bonding information can
be written. - When more than one structure satisfies the rules,
we call them resonance structures. - Real molecule is a hybrid of all possible Lewis
structures. - Resonance stabilizes the molecule.
- Try O3.
36DRAWING LEWIS STRUCTURES
- Multiple Bonds O2 and N2
- Multiple Central Atoms C2H6, N2H4, C3H8, C6H6,
CH3NH2, CH3COOH
37Compounds ContainingPolyatomic Ions
- A polyatomic ion is a stable group of atoms that
has either a positive or negative charge and
behaves as a single unit in many chemical
reactions. - Practice NH4, SO32-, NO2-, NO3-, I3-,
38A scale of relative electronegativities was
developed by Linus Pauling. Electronegativity
decreases down a group for representative
elements.
Electronegativity generally increases left to
right across a period.
Metals are low in EN and nonmetals are high.
39ELECTRONEGATIVITY
- Electronegativity The relative attraction that
an atom has for a pair of shared electrons in a
covalent bond. - If the two atoms that constitute a covalent bond
are identical then there is equal sharing of
electrons. - This is called nonpolar covalent bonding.
- Ionic bonding and nonpolar covalent bonding
- represent two extremes.
40ELECTRONEGATIVITY
- If the two atoms that constitute a covalent bond
are not identical then there is unequal sharing
of electrons. - This is called polar covalent bonding.
- One atom assumes a partial positive charge and
the other atom assumes a partial negative
charge. - This charge difference is a result of the unequal
attractions the atoms have for their shared
electron pair.
41ELECTRONEGATIVITY
- H-H are the same atom, and have the same
greediness, so the two atoms are forced to
share equally. - F-F same - forced to share equally.
- If two atoms have diff EN, the one with higher EN
will take the e-s in the pair more often than
the other atom. - H-F are not the same atoms, and are not equal in
greediness, F is far greedier, takes the e-s more
than half the time.
42Polar Covalent Bonding in HF
Partial positive charge on hydrogen.
Partial negative charge on fluorine.
The shared electron pair is closer to fluorine
than to hydrogen.
Shared electron pair.
43Types of Covalent Bonding
- The polarity of a bond is determined by the
difference in electronegativity values of the
atoms forming the bond. - If the electronegativity difference between two
bonded atoms is greater than 1.9 to 2.0, the bond
will be more ionic than covalent. - If the electronegativity difference is greater
than 2, the bond is strongly ionic. - If the electronegativity difference is less than
1.9 but greater than 0.5, the bond is polar
covalent. - If the electronegativity differences is 0.5 or
less, the bond in nonpolar covalent.
44Types of Covalent Bonding
- Estimate whether a bond is polar cov, mostly pure
or nonpolar cov or ionic by finding the absolute
value of the difference in EN between the two
atoms in the bond. - __________________________________________
-
- 0 .2 .4 .6 .8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6
1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 - nonpolar polar cov
mostly ionic - covalent
- Practice H-Cl, C-Cl, C-O and CO, N-Cl, Ca-N
- H-Cl C-Cl C-O CO N-Cl Ca-N
- 0.9 0.5 1.0 1.0 0.0 2.0
- pol cov nonpol ionic
45Molecular Geometry
(bent)
bent
One more geometry is trigonal pyramidal.
46Some Geometric Figures
- Linear
- 2 atoms on opposite sides of central atom
- 180 bond angles
- Trigonal Planar
- 3 atoms form a triangle around the central atom
- Planar
- 120 bond angles
- Tetrahedral
- 4 surrounding atoms form a tetrahedron
around the central atom - 109.5 bond angles
47Some Geometric Figures
- Trigonal Pyramidal
- 3 atoms form a triangular pyramid beneath the
central atom - Not planar
- 109 bond angles
- Derivative of tetrahedral geometry
48The Valence ShellElectron Pair Repulsion (VSEPR)
Model
- The VSEPR model is based on the idea that
electron pairs will repel each other electrically
and will seek to minimize this repulsion. - To accomplish this minimization, the electron
pairs will be arranged as far apart as possible
around a central atom. - The 3-dimensional arrangement of the atoms within
a molecule determines molecular interactions
(physical properties and chemical reactions).
49BeCl2 is a molecule with only two pairs of
electrons around beryllium, its central atom.
Its electrons are arranged 180o apart for maximum
separation.
LINEAR EP ARRANGEMENT MOLECULAR GEOMETRY
50- BF3 is a molecule with three pairs of electrons
around boron, its central atom.
Its electrons are arranged 120o apart for maximum
separation.
This arrangement of atoms is called trigonal
planar.
51- CH4 is a molecule with four pairs of electrons
around carbon, its central atom.
An obvious choice for its atomic arrangement is a
90o angle between its atoms with all of its atoms
in a single plane.
However, since the molecule is 3-dimensional the
molecular structure is tetrahedral with a bond
angle of 109.5o.
52- Ball and stick models of methane, CH4, and carbon
tetrachloride, CCl4.
53Tetrahedral Shapes
- Tetrahedral
- 4 areas of electrons around the central atom
- 109.5 bond angles
- All Bonding tetrahedral
- 3 Bonding 1 Lone Pair trigonal pyramid
- 2 Bonding 2 Lone Pair bent
54Tetrahedral Derivatives
55- Ammonia, NH3, has four electron pairs around
nitrogen.
The arrangement of electron pairs around nitrogen
is tetrahedral.
56NH3 has one lone pair of electrons.
The NH3 molecule is trigonal pyramidal.
57- Water has four electron pairs around oxygen.
The arrangement of electron pairs around oxygen
is tetrahedral.
58H2O has two lone pairs of electrons.
The H2O molecule is bent.
59The VSEPR Model
- Summary electron pair arrangement depends upon
of bonded atoms and lone pairs around the central
atom. Lone pairs exert more repulsion that bond
pairs. Count of bonded atoms (B) and of LPs
(E). - EP Arrangements 2 Linear 3 Trigonal
Planar 4 Tetrahedral - Within these electron pair arrangements, the
molecular geometry is based only on seeing the
atoms. I call the molecular geometry the family
members and the electron pair arrangement is the
electron pair family the members are in. - Electron Pair Families and their Molecular
Geometry members - Linear AB2, linear only
- Trigonal Planar AB3 trigonal planar AB2E bent
- Tetrahedral AB4 tetrahedral AB3E trigonal
pyramidal, and AB2E2 bent
60VSEPR Practice
- Use practice sheets in packet to fill in Electron
Pair Arrangement and Molecular Geometry and Bond
Angles.
61Dipole Moments
- A dipole is a molecule with positively and
negatively charged ends - Polar covalent bonds or molecules have one end
slightly positive, d and the other slightly
negative, d- - (not full charges, come from nonsymmetrical
electron distribution) - Dipole Moment is a measure of the size of the
polarity. (We are NOT going to worry about the
Debye unit or actual numbers for dipole moment,
just whether a molecule has a dipole or not.) -
62Polarity of Molecules
- For a molecule to be polar it must
- - have polar bonds
- electronegativity difference - theory
- bond dipole moments measured values
- - have an unsymmetrical shape
- vector addition
- Polarity affects the intermolecular forces of
attraction
63DIPOLE
NO DIPOLE
Polar covalent bonds, but nonpolar
molecule, because vectors cancel
Polar covalent bonds and unsymmetrical shape
cause molecule to be polar
64Adding Dipole Moments
Table 10.3