Title: UNIT 3 Chapters 6
1UNIT 3Chapters 6 10
- Chemical Bonding Intermolecular Forces
2Chapter 6
3Chemical Bonding
Chapter 6 Section 1 Introduction to Chemical
Bonding
- Valence electrons are the electrons in the outer
shell (highest energy level) of an atom. - A chemical bond is a mutual electrical attraction
between the nuclei and valence electrons of
different atoms that binds the atoms together. - During bonding, valence electrons are
redistributed in ways that make the atoms more
stable.
4The Three Major Types of Chemical Bonding
Chapter 6 Section 1 Introduction to Chemical
Bonding
- Ionic Bonding results from the electrical
attraction between oppositely-charged ions. - Covalent Bonding results from the sharing of
electron pairs between two atoms. - Metallic Bonding results from the attraction
between metal atoms and the surrounding sea of
electrons.
5Ionic or Covalent?
Chapter 6 Section 1 Introduction to Chemical
Bonding
- Bonding is usually somewhere between ionic and
covalent, depending on the electronegativity
difference between the two atoms. - In polar covalent bonds, the bonded atoms have an
unequal attraction for the shared electron.
0.3
0
1.7
3.3
6Ionic or Covalent?Sample Problem
Chapter 6 Section 1 Introduction to Chemical
Bonding
- Use electronegativity values (in table on pg
161)to classify bonding between sulfur, S, and
the following elements hydrogen, H cesium, Cs
and chlorine, Cl. In each pair, which atom will
be more negative? - Solution
-
Bonding Morebetween Electroneg.
negative sulfur and difference Bond type atom
2.5 2.1 0.4
polar-covalent
sulfur
hydrogen cesium chlorine
2.5 0.7 1.8
ionic
sulfur
3.0 2.5 0.5
polar-covalent
chlorine
7Molecules
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- A covalent bond is formed from shared pairs of
electrons. - A molecule is a neutral group of atoms held
together by covalent bonds.
8Why Do Covalent Bonds Form?
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- When two atoms form a covalent bond, their shared
electrons form overlapping orbitals. - This gives both atoms a stable noble-gas
configuration.
9The Octet Rule
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Atoms are the most stable whenthey have
completely full valenceshells (like the noble
gases.) - The Octet Rule Compounds tend to form so that
each atom has an octet (group of eight)
electrons in its highest energy level. - Hydrogen is an exception to the octet rule since
it can only have two electrons in its valence
shell.
10Electron-Dot Notation
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Electron-dot notation is indicated by dots
placed around the elements symbol. Only the
valence electrons are shown.Inner-shell
electrons are not shown.
11Electron-Dot NotationSample Problem
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- a. Write the electron-dot notation for hydrogen.
- b. Write the electron-dot notation for nitrogen.
- Solution
- Hydrogen is in group 1. It has one valence
electron. - Nitrogen is in group 15. It has 5 valence
electrons.
H
N
12Lewis Structures
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Electron-dot notations of two or more atoms can
be combined to represent molecules. - Unpaired electrons will pair up to form a shared
pair or covalent bond.
13Lewis Structures (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- The pair of dots representing the shared pair of
electrons in a covalent bond is often replaced
by a long dash. - An unshared pair, also called a lone pair, is a
pair of electrons that is not involved in
bonding and that belongs exclusively to one
atom.
Shared pair (covalent bond)
Lone pair
14How to Draw Lewis Structures
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Draw the electron-dot notation for each type of
atom, and count the valence electrons. - Put the least electronegative atom in the center
(except H.) - Use electron pairs to form bonds between all
atoms. - Make sure all atoms (except H) have octets.
- Count the total electrons in your Lewis
structure. Does it match the number you counted
in step 1? If not, introduce multiple bonds.
15Lewis StructuresSample Problem A
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Draw the Lewis structure of iodomethane, CH3I.
- Solution
- Step 1 - Draw the electron-dot notation for each
type of atom, and count the valence electrons.
C 1 x 4 e- 4 e-
3H 3 x 1 e- 3 e-
I 1 x 7 e- 7 e-
14 e- Total
16Lewis StructuresSample Problem A (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Step 2 Put the least electronegative atom in
the center (except H). - Step 3 Use electron pairs to form bonds between
all atoms. - Step 4 Make sure all atoms (except H) have
octets. - Step 5 Count the total electrons. Does it
match your beginning total?
?
H
?
14 Total e-
H
C
I
H
17Multiple Covalent Bonds
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- In a single covalent bond, one pair ofelectrons
is shared between two atoms. - A double bond is a covalent bond in which two
pairs of electrons are shared between two atoms. - A triple bond is a covalent bond in which three
pairs of electrons are shared between two atoms. - Multiple bonds are often found in molecules
containing carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen.
Single Bond
Double Bond
Triple Bond
18Lewis StructuresSample Problem B
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Draw the Lewis structure for methanal, CH2O.
- Solution
- Step 1 - Draw the electron-dot notation for each
type of atom, and count the valence electrons.
C 1 x 4 e- 4 e-
2H 2 x 1 e- 2 e-
O 1 x 6 e- 6 e-
12 e- Total
19Lewis StructuresSample Problem B (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding and
Molecular Compounds
- Step 2 Put the least electronegative atom in
the center (except H). - Step 3 Use electron pairs to form bonds between
all atoms. - Step 4 Make sure all atoms (except H) have
octets. - Step 5 Count the total electrons. Does it
match your beginning total? - If not, introduce multiple bonds (remove 2 lone
pairs to make 1 shared pair.) - Now does it match?
?
?
14 Total e-
H
C
O
?
12 Total e-
H
20Formation of Ionic Compounds
Chapter 6 Section 3 Ionic Bonding and Ionic
Compounds
- Sodium and other metals easily lose electrons to
form positively-charged ions called cations. - Chlorine and other non-metals easily gain
electrons to form negatively-charged ions called
anions.
21Ionic Bonding
Chapter 6 Section 3 Ionic Bonding and Ionic
Compounds
- Cations () and anions (-)are attracted to each
other because of their opposite electrical
charges. - An ionic bond is a bondthat forms
betweenoppositely-charged ionsbecause of their
mutualelectrical attraction.
22Ionic Bonding and the Crystal Lattice
Chapter 6 Section 3 Ionic Bonding and Ionic
Compounds
- In an ionic crystal, ions minimize their
potential energy by combining in an orderly
arrangement known as a crystal lattice. - A formula unit is the smallest repeating unit of
an ionic compound.
Sodium Chloride crystal lattice (many Na and Cl
atoms) Formula Unit NaCl
23Comparing Ionic and Covalent Compounds
Chapter 6 Section 3 Ionic Bonding and Ionic
Compounds
- Covalent compounds have relatively weak forces of
attraction between molecules, but ionic compounds
have a strong attraction between ions. This
causes some differences in their properties
Ionic
Covalent
molecules
crystals
very high melting points
low melting points
hard, but brittle
usually gas or liquid
Ex NaCl, CaF2, KNO3
Ex H2O, CO2, O2
24Polyatomic Ions
Chapter 6 Section 3 Ionic Bonding and Ionic
Compounds
- A charged group of covalently bonded atoms is
known as a polyatomic ion. - Draw a Lewis structure for a polyatomic ion with
brackets around it and the charge in the upper
right corner.
hydroxide ion, OH-
ammonium ion, NH4
25The Metallic Bond
Chapter 6 Section 4 Metallic Bonding
- In metals, overlapping orbitals allow the outer
electrons of the atoms to roam freely throughout
the entire metal. - These mobile electrons form a sea of electrons
around the metal atoms, which are packed
together in a crystal lattice. - A metallic bond results from the attraction
between metal atoms and the surrounding sea of
electrons.
26Properties of Metals
Chapter 6 Section 4 Metallic Bonding
- The characteristics of metallic bonding gives
metals their unique properties, listed below. - electrical conductivity
- thermal (heat) conductivity
- malleability (can be hammered into thin sheets)
- ductility (can be pulled or extruded into wires)
- luster (shiny appearance)
27VSEPR Theory
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- The abbreviation VSEPR (say it VES-pur) stands
for valence-shell electron-pair repulsion. - VSEPR theory repulsion between pairs of
valence electrons aroundan atom causes the
electron pairs tobe oriented as far apart as
possible. - Treat double and triple bonds the same as single
bonds.
28VSEPR Theory (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- VSEPR theory can also account for the geometries
of molecules with unshared electron pairs. - VSEPR theory postulates that the lone pairs
occupy space around the central atom just like
bonding pairs, but they repel other electron
pairs more strongly than bonding pairs do.
29VSEPR Theory (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- 2 electron pairs around acentral atom will be
180oapart, and the moleculesshape will be
linear. - 3 bonding pairs around acentral atom will be
120oapart, and the moleculesshape will be
trigonal planar.If one of the pairs is a
lonepair, the shape will be bent.
30VSEPR Theory (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- 4 bonding pairs around acentral atom will be
109.5oapart, and the moleculesshape will be
tetrahedral.If one of the pairs is a lonepair,
the shape will be trigonal pyramidal. If two
of the pairs are lone pairs, the shape will be
bent. - Unshared pairs repel electrons more strongly and
will result in smaller bond angles.
31VSEPR TheorySample Problem A
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- Use VSEPR theory to predict the molecular
geometry of water, H2O. - Solution
- Draw the Lewis Structure for H2O
- How many total electron pairs aresurrounding the
central atom? - How many are unshared pairs?
- The shape is bent.
?
Total Electrons 8 e-
?
Octets
H
H
O
4
O
2
H
H
32VSEPR TheorySample Problem B
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- Use VSEPR theory to predict the molecular
geometry of carbon dioxide, CO2. - Solution
- Draw the Lewis Structure for CO2
- How many total electron pairs aresurrounding the
central atom? - The shape is linear.
?
Total Electrons 16 e-
?
Octets
C
O
O
2 (double or triple bonds count the same as
single)
33Molecular Polarity
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- Molecular Polarity depends on both bondpolarity
and molecular geometry. - If all bonds are non-polar, the moleculeis
always non-polar. - If bonds are polar, but there is symmetry in the
molecule so that the polarity of the bonds
cancels out, then the molecule is non-polar. (Ex
CO2, CCl4) - If bonds are polar but there is no symmetry such
that they cancel each other out, the overall
molecule is polar. (Ex H20, CH3Cl)
34Intermolecular Forces
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- The forces of attraction between molecules are
called intermolecular forces. - Intermolecular forces vary in strength but are
generally weaker than any of the three
types of chemical bonds (covalent, ionic
or metallic.)
35Intermolecular Forces (continued)
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- The strongest intermolecular forces exist
between polar molecules. - Because of their uneven charge distribution,
polar molecules have dipoles. - A dipole is represented by an arrow with its
head pointing toward the negative pole and a
crossed tail at the positive pole.
36Types of Intermolecular Forces
Chapter 6 Section 5 Molecular Geometry
- 3 types of intermolecular forces (strongest to
weakest) - Dipole-dipole between 2 polar molecules. The -
side of 1 dipole attracts the side of another. - Hydrogen Bonding a very strong type of
dipole-dipole force. Only existsbetween atoms of
H and N, O or F. - Induced dipole between a polar and a non-polar
molecule. - London dispersion forces instantaneous dipoles
created by the constant motion of electrons.
37Chapter 10
38The Kinetic-Molecular Theory
Chapter 10 Section 1 The Kinetic-Molecular
Theory of Matter
- The kinetic-molecular theory of matter states
- Particles of matter (atoms and molecules) are
always in motion. - We measure this energy of motion(kinetic energy)
as temperature. - If temperature increases, theparticles will gain
more energy and move even faster. - Molecular motion is greatest in gases, less in
liquids, and least in solids.
39Gases
Chapter 10 Section 1 The Kinetic-Molecular
Theory of Matter
- An Ideal Gas is a hypothetical gas that perfectly
fits all the assumptions of the kinetic-molecular
theory. - Many gases behave nearlyideally if pressure is
not veryhigh and temperature is not very low. - Fluidity Gas particles glide easily past one
another. Because liquids and gases flow, they
are both referred to as fluids.
40Gases (continued)
Chapter 10 Section 1 The Kinetic-Molecular
Theory of Matter
- Low Density Gas particles are very far apart.
The density of a gas is about 1/1000 the density
of the same substance in the liquid or solid
state. - Expansion A gas will expand to fill its
container. - Compressibility The volume of a gas can be
greatly decreased by pushing the particles closer
together.
41Liquids
Chapter 10 Section 2 Liquids
- Surface Tension Strong cohesive forces at a
liquids surface act to decrease the surface
area to the smallest possible size. The higher
the force of attraction between the particles
of a liquid, the higher the surface tension.
42Liquids (continued)
Chapter 10 Section 2 Liquids
- Vaporization A liquid or solidchanging to a
gas. - Evaporation particles escape from the surface
of a liquid andbecome a gas. This occurs
because liquid particles havedifferent kinetic
energies. - Boiling bubbles of vapor appear throughout a
liquid. Will not occur below a certain
temperature (the boiling point.) - A volatile liquid is one that evaporates readily.
43Solids
Chapter 10 Section 3 Solids
- There are two main types of solids
- Crystalline Solids Made up of crystals.
Particles are arranged in an orderly,
geometric, repeating pattern. - Amorphous Solid Particles are arranged
randomly.
44Solids (continued)
Chapter 10 Section 3 Solids
- Melting Point The temperature at which a solid
becomes a liquid. At this temperature, the
kinetic energies of the particles within the
solid overcome the attractive forces holding them
together.