Title: The Shapes of Molecules
1Chapter 10
The Shapes of Molecules
2The Shapes of Molecules
10.1 Depicting Molecules and Ions with Lewis
Structures
10.2 Using Lewis Structures and Bond Energies to
Calculate Heats of Reaction
10.3 Valence-Shell Electron-Pair Repulsion
(VSEPR) Theory and Molecular Shape
10.4 Molecular Shape and Molecular Polarity
3Rules for Lewis Structures
- 1. Attach atoms in reasonable fashion with single
bonds - Consider ABn formulas, atom with lower group
number goes in center with others attached to it.
If same group number, place atom with highest
period in center. - The atom with the lowest E.N. goes in middle
- Consider of free valence e-, this is often the
number of bonds this atom will make. Atoms
making more bonds will be central in molecules. - 2. Sum valence electrons (adding for neg charge
and sub for pos.) - 3. Complete octets of peripheral atoms (not He
like atoms) - 4. Place leftover e- on central atom
- 5. If necessary use multiple bonds to fill center
atom's octet - Last Slide
4Molecular formula
For NF3
Atom placement
N 5e-
F
F
Sum of valence e-
F 7e-
X 3 21e-
N
Total 26e-
F
Remaining valence e-
Lewis structure
5SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.1
Writing Lewis Structures for Molecules with One
Central Atom
SOLUTION
Cl
Step 1 Carbon has the lowest EN and is the
central atom. The other atoms are placed
around it.
C
Cl
F
F
Steps 2-4 C has 4 valence e-, Cl and F each
have 7. The sum is 4 4(7) 32 valence e-.
Make bonds and fill in remaining valence
electrons placing 8e- around each atom.
6SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.2
Writing Lewis Structure for Molecules with More
than One Central Atom
SOLUTION
Hydrogen can have only one bond so C and O must
be next to each other with H filling in the
bonds. There are 4(1) 4 6 14 valence
e-. C has 4 bonds and O has 2. O has 2 pair of
nonbonding e-.
H
C
O
H
H
H
7SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.3
Writing Lewis Structures for Molecules with
Multiple Bonds.
PROBLEM
Write Lewis structures for the following (a)
Ethylene (C2H4), the most important reactant in
the manufacture of polymers (b) Nitrogen (N2),
the most abundant atmospheric gas
PLAN
For molecules with multiple bonds, there is a
Step 5 which follows the other steps in Lewis
structure construction. If a central atom does
not have 8e-, an octet, then e- can be moved in
to form a multiple bond.
SOLUTION
(a) There are 2(4) 4(1) 12 valence e-. H
can have only one bond per atom.
(b) N2 has 2(5) 10 valence e-. Therefore a
triple bond is required to make the octet around
each N.
8Resonance Delocalized Electron-Pair Bonding
O3 can be drawn in 2 ways -
Neither structure is actually correct but can be
drawn to represent a structure which is a hybrid
of the two - a resonance structure.
Resonance structures have the same relative atom
placement but a difference in the locations of
bonding and nonbonding electron pairs.
9SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.4
Writing Resonance Structures
PROBLEM
Write resonance structures for the nitrate ion,
NO3-.
PLAN
After Steps 1-4, go to 5 and then see if other
structures can be drawn in which the electrons
can be delocalized over more than two atoms.
SOLUTION
Nitrate has 1(5) 3(6) 1 24 valence e-
N does not have an octet a pair of e- will move
in to form a double bond.
10Resonance (continued)
Formal charge of atom valence e- - (
unshared electrons 1/2 shared electrons)
Smaller formal charges (either positive or
negative) are preferable to larger charges
Avoid like charges ( or - - ) on adjacent
atoms
A more negative formal charge should exist on an
atom with a larger EN value.
11Formal Charge Selecting the Best Resonance
Structure
An atom owns all of its nonbonding electrons
and half of its bonding electrons.
Formal charge of atom valence e- - (
unshared electrons 1/2 shared electrons)
12Resonance (continued)
EXAMPLE NCO- has 3 possible resonance forms -
formal charges
-2
0
1
-1
0
0
0
0
-1
Forms B and C have negative formal charges on N
and O this makes them more important than form
A.
Form C has a negative charge on O which is the
more electronegative element, therefore C
contributes the most to the resonance hybrid.
13Exceptions to the Octet Rule
- Electron deficient have fewer than eight
- ex BeCl2, BF3
- may attain an octet by coordinate covalent bond
- Odd number of electrons aka free radicals
- ex NO2
- May attain an octet by pairing with another free
radical - Expanded Octets only on period 3 and higher
- Expanded octets form when an atom can decrease
(or maintain at 0) its formal charge - ex SF6, PCl5, H2SO4, SO2, SO3, SO4
14SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.5
Writing Lewis Structures for Exceptions to the
Octet Rule.
PLAN
Draw the Lewis structures for the molecule and
determine if there is an element which can be an
exception to the octet rule. Note that (a)
contains P which is a Period-3 element and can
have an expanded valence shell.
SOLUTION
(a) H3PO4 has two resonance forms and formal
charges indicate the more important form.
-1
0
1
0
(b) BFCl2 will have only 1 Lewis structure.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
more stable
0
0
lower formal charges
15Bond Energies and ?Hrxn
- In chemical reactions, reactant bonds are broken
and new product bonds are formed. The overall
energy change of a reaction is the energy change
of this process, plus the energy associated with
changes of state. - In gaseous reactions (no state changes)
- ?Hºrxn ?Hºbonds broken ?Hºbonds formed
16Figure 10.2
Using bond energies to calculate DH0rxn
DH0rxn DH0reactant bonds broken DH0product
bonds formed
Enthalpy, H
DH01 sum of BE
DH02 - sum of BE
DH0rxn
17Figure 10.3
Using bond energies to calculate DH0rxn of
methane
BOND BREAKAGE
4BE(C-H) 1652kJ
2BE(O2) 996kJ
DH0(bond breaking) 2648kJ
BOND FORMATION
4-BE(O-H) -1868kJ
Enthalpy,H
DH0(bond forming) -3466kJ
18SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.6
Calculating Enthalpy Changes from Bond Energies
SOLUTION
bonds broken
bonds formed
19SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.6
Calculating Enthalpy Changes from Bond Energies
continued
bonds broken
bonds formed
4 C-H 4 mol(413 kJ/mol) 1652 kJ
3 C-Cl 3 mol(-339 kJ/mol) -1017 kJ
3 Cl-Cl 3 mol(243 kJ/mol) 729 kJ
1 C-H 1 mol(-413 kJ/mol) -413 kJ
3 H-Cl 3 mol(-427 kJ/mol) -1281 kJ
DH0bonds broken 2381 kJ
DH0bonds formed -2711 kJ
DH0reaction DH0bonds broken DH0bonds formed
2381 kJ (-2711 kJ) - 330 kJ
20Molecular Shapes
- Lewis structures show which atoms are connected
where, and by how many bonds, but they don't
properly show 3-D shapes of molecules. - To find the actual shape of a molecule, first
draw the Lewis structure, and then use VSEPR
Theory.
21Valence Shell Electron-Pair Repulsion Theory or
VSEPR
- molecular shape is determined by the repulsions
of electron pairs - Electron pairs around the central atom stay as
far apart as possible. - electron pair geometry - based on number of
regions of electron density - Consider non-bonding (lone pairs) as well as
bonding electrons. - Electron pairs in single, double and triple bonds
are treated as single electron clouds. - molecular geometry - based on the electron pair
geometry, this is the shape of the molecule
22Figure 10.4
A balloon analogy for the mutual repulsion of
electron groups.
23Figure 10.5
Electron-group repulsions and the five basic
molecular shapes.
24Figure 10.6
The single molecular shape of the linear
electron-group arrangement.
Examples CS2, HCN, BeF2
25Figure 10.7
The two molecular shapes of the trigonal planar
electron-group arrangement.
Examples SO2, O3, PbCl2, SnBr2
Examples SO3, BF3, NO3-, CO32-
26Factors Affecting Actual Bond Angles
Bond angles are consistent with theoretical
angles when the atoms attached to the central
atom are the same and when all electrons are
bonding electrons of the same order.
1200
larger EN
1200
ideal
greater electron density
lone pairs repel bonding pairs more strongly than
bonding pairs repel each other
950
27Figure 10.8
The three molecular shapes of the tetrahedral
electron-group arrangement.
Examples CH4, SiCl4, SO42-, ClO4-
NH3 PF3 ClO3 H3O
H2O OF2 SCl2
28Figure 10.9
Lewis structures and molecular shapes
29Figure 10.10
The four molecular shapes of the trigonal
bipyramidal electron-group arrangement.
PF5 AsF5 SOF4
SF4 XeO2F2 IF4 IO2F2-
XeF2 I3- IF2-
ClF3 BrF3
30Figure 10.11
The three molecular shapes of the octahedral
electron-group arrangement.
SF6 IOF5
BrF5 TeF5- XeOF4
XeF4 ICl4-
31Figure 10.12
The steps in determining a molecular shape.
Molecular formula
Step 1
Lewis structure
Count all e- groups around central atom (A)
Step 2
Electron-group arrangement
Note lone pairs and double bonds
Step 3
Count bonding and nonbonding e- groups separately.
Bond angles
Step 4
Molecular shape (AXmEn)
32SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.7
Predicting Molecular Shapes with Two, Three, or
Four Electron Groups
The shape is based upon the tetrahedral
arrangement.
The F-P-F bond angles should be lt109.50 due to
the repulsion of the nonbonding electron pair.
The final shape is trigonal pyramidal.
lt109.50
The type of shape is AX3E
33SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.7
Predicting Molecular Shapes with Two, Three, or
Four Electron Groups
continued
(b) For COCl2, C has the lowest EN and will be
the center atom.
There are 24 valence e-, 3 atoms attached to the
center atom.
C does not have an octet a pair of nonbonding
electrons will move in from the O to make a
double bond.
Type AX3
The shape for an atom with three atom attachments
and no nonbonding pairs on the central atom is
trigonal planar.
The Cl-C-Cl bond angle will be less than 1200 due
to the electron density of the CO.
34SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.8
Predicting Molecular Shapes with Five or Six
Electron Groups
(b) BrF5 - 42 valence e- 5 bonding pairs and 1
nonbonding pair on central atom. Shape is AX5E,
square pyramidal.
35Figure 10.13
The tetrahedral centers of ethane.
36Figure 10.13
The tetrahedral centers of ethanol.
37SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.9
Predicting Molecular Shapes with More Than One
Central Atom
SOLUTION
38Figure 10.14
The orientation of polar molecules in an electric
field.
39SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.10
Predicting the Polarity of Molecules
(a) Ammonia, NH3
(b) Boron trifluoride, BF3
(c) Carbonyl sulfide, COS (atom sequence SCO)
The dipoles reinforce each other, so the overall
molecule is definitely polar.
ENN 3.0
ENH 2.1
molecular dipole
bond dipoles
40SAMPLE PROBLEM 10.10
Predicting the Polarity of Molecules
continued
(b) BF3 has 24 valence e- and all electrons
around the B will be involved in bonds. The
shape is AX3, trigonal planar.
F (EN 4.0) is more electronegative than B (EN
2.0) and all of the dipoles will be directed from
B to F. Because all are at the same angle and of
the same magnitude, the molecule is nonpolar.
1200
(c) COS is linear. C and S have the same EN
(2.0) but the CO bond is quite polar(DEN) so the
molecule is polar overall.
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