Title: Chang Chapter 10 Outline
1Chang Chapter 10 Outline
- Molecular Geometry
- Dipole Moments
- Valence Bond Theory
- Hybridization of Atomic Orbitals
- Hybridization in Molecules Containing Double and
Triple Bonds - Molecular Orbital Theory
210.1 Molecular Geometry
- Valence Shell outermost electron-occupied shell
of an atom, it hold the electrons that are
usually involved in bonding. - Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Model
(VESPR) - As far as VESPR is concerned, double and triple
bonds can be considered as single bonds with
regard to shape - If a molecule has 2 or more resonance structures,
we can apply the VESPR model to any one of them
3Ideal Geometries
- There is a fundamental geometry that corresponds
to the total number of electron pairs around the
central atom 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6
linear
trigonal planar
tetrahedral
trigonal bipyramidal
octahedral
4Molecules in which the Central Atom has no lone
pairs
- Linear (BeF2) Trigonal Planar (BF3)
- 180 120 (Equilateral Triangle)
5Four Electron Pairs
- Tetrahedral (CH4)
- Bond angles are 109.5
6Five Electron Pairs
- Trigonal bipyramid (PCl5)
- Bond angles vary
- In the trigonal plane, 120
- Between the plane and apexes, 90
- Between the central atom and both apexes, 180
7Six Electron Pairs
- Octahedron (SF6)
- Octahedral or square bipyramid
- Bond angles vary
- 90 in and out of plane
- 180 between diametrically opposite atoms and the
central atom
8Molecular Geometry Summarized
9Molecular Geometry Summarized
10Molecular Geometry Summary
11Molecular Geometry Summary
12Lone Pairs and Expanded Octets
- Where expanded octets are possible, place the
extra lone pairs on the central atom - Example XeF4
13Bond Angles and Lone Pairs
- Ammonia and water show smaller bond angles than
predicted from the ideal geometry - The lone pair is larger in volume than a bond
pair - There is a nucleus at only one end of the bond so
the electrons are free to spread out over a
larger area of space
14One and Two Lone Pairs - Ammonia and Water
15VESPR Guidelines
- Write the Lewis structure of the molecule
considering only the electron pairs around the
central atom - Count the number of electron pairs around the
central atom. Treat double and triple bonds as
though they were a single bond - Predict the overall arrangement of the electron
pairs - Predict the overall geometry of the molecule
- When predicting bond angles, remember that lone
pairs repel one another more than a bonding pair
repels another bonding pair.
1610.2 Dipole Moments
Where ยต is the product of the charge q and the
distance r between the charges
17Diatomic Molecules
- Diatomic molecules of the same element are purely
covalent, have no polarity, and are called
nonpolar molecules - Diatomic molecules of different elements have
dipole moments and are called polar molecules
18The Hydrogen Molecule
19Covalent Bonding Introduction
- Electron density
- Electrons are located between the nuclei of atoms
- When two hydrogen atoms come together, electron
density is spread over the entire molecule
20Polarity of Molecules
2110.3 Valence Bond Theory
- Valence bond theory (VB) assumes that the
electrons in a molecule occupy atomic orbitals of
the individual atoms atoms retain their own
electrons - Molecular orbital theory (MO) assumes the
formation of molecular orbitals from the atomic
orbitals - Neither theory perfectly explains all aspects of
bonding, but each has contributed something to
our understanding of many observed molecular
properties - Atoms attract one another until the repel one
another (nuclei and electrons included) - The formation of bonds gives off heat (ouch)
2210.4 Hybridization of Atomic Orbitals
- sp3 hybridization
- C has 2s2 and 2p2 valence electrons 4 total
- 1 paired s electron jumps to the p orbital so we
now have 1 unpaired s and 3 unpaired p orbitals - Valence Bond Theory says we now have a
hypothetical sp3 hybridization (1 from an s and 3
from a p, making 4 sp3 hybridized orbitals
23sp2 hybridization
- sp2 hybridization
- BF3
- B has 2 paired 2s electrons and 1 unpaired 2p
electron - If 1 of the paired 2s electrons is promoted to
the 2p orbital, we would now have 1 unpaired s
electron and 2 unpaired p orbitals or a
hybridized sp2 orbital
24Procedure for Hybridizing Atomic Orbitals
- Draw the Lewis Dot Structure
- Predict the overall arrangement of the electron
pairs (both bonding and lone pairs) using the
VESPR model - Deduce the hybridization of the central atom by
matching the arrangement of the electron pairs
with those of the hybrid orbitals shown
25Hybridized Orbitals
- Orbitals Hybrid New Orbitals Degrees
Compound - s,p sp 2 orbitals 180 BeCl2
- s,p,p sp2 3 orbitals 120 BF3
- s,p,p,p sp3 4 orbitals 109.5 CH4
- s,p,p,p,d sp3d 5 orbitals 90 and 120 PCl5
- s,p,p,p,d,d sp3d2 6 orbitals 90 and 90 SF6
2610.5 Hybridization of Molecules Containing Double
and Triple Bonds
- Sigma bonds (s) are covalent bonds formed by 2
orbitals overlapping end to end with the electron
density concentrated between the nuclei of the
bonding atoms - Pi bonds (p) are covalent bonds formed by
sideways overlapping p orbitals with electron
densities concentrated above and below the plane
of the nuclei of the bonding atoms
2710.6 Molecular Orbital Theory
- Molecular orbitals result from interaction of the
atomic orbitals of the bonding atoms and are
associated with the entire molecule - A bonding molecular orbital has lower energy and
greater stability than the atomic orbitals from
which it was formed - An antibonding molecular orbital has higher
energy and lower stability than the atomic
orbitals from which it was formed. - In a sigma molecular orbital, the electron
density is concentrated symmetrically around a
line between the two nuclei of the bonding atoms
28Pi Bonds
- In a pi molecular orbital, the electron density
is concentrated above and below a line joining
the two nuclei of the bonding atoms.
29Rules Governing Molecular Electron Configuration
and Stability
- The number of molecular orbitals formed is always
equal to the number of atomic orbitals combined - The more stable the bonding molecular orbital,
the less stable the corresponding antibonding
molecular orbital - The filling of molecular orbitals proceeds from
low to high energies. - Like an atomic orbital, each molecular orbital
can accommodate up to two electrons with opposite
spins - When electrons are added to molecular orbitals of
the same energy, the most stable arrangement is
predicted by Hunds Rule - The number of electrons in the molecular orbitals
is equal to the sum of all the electrons on the
bonding atoms.
30Bond Order