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Basic Concepts of Chemical Bonding

This document provides an overview of chemical bonding concepts including: - Types of bonds including ionic, covalent, and metallic bonds. - Lewis structures are used to represent valence electrons of atoms as dots. - Ionic bonding results from the electrostatic attraction between cations and anions. Covalent bonding involves the sharing of electron pairs between atoms. - Polar covalent bonds occur when electrons are shared unequally between atoms due to differing electronegativity. - Exceptions to the octet rule include molecules with an odd number of electrons, less than or more than eight electrons around an atom.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
351 views42 pages

Basic Concepts of Chemical Bonding

This document provides an overview of chemical bonding concepts including: - Types of bonds including ionic, covalent, and metallic bonds. - Lewis structures are used to represent valence electrons of atoms as dots. - Ionic bonding results from the electrostatic attraction between cations and anions. Covalent bonding involves the sharing of electron pairs between atoms. - Polar covalent bonds occur when electrons are shared unequally between atoms due to differing electronegativity. - Exceptions to the octet rule include molecules with an odd number of electrons, less than or more than eight electrons around an atom.

Uploaded by

JohnnySnow
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 5

Basic Concepts of Chemical Bonding

Types of Bonds
Chemical Bond a strong attraction between atoms Ionic Bond an electrostatic interaction where one atom donates an electron to the other Covalent Bond atoms share electrons Metallic Bond atoms bonded to several others and electrons can move freely.
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Types of Bonding

Lewis Structures of Atoms


In a Lewis structure, we represent the valence electrons of main-group elements as dots surrounding the symbol for the element aka electron dot structures the symbol of the element is used to represent the nucleus and inner electrons

dots around the symbol represent valence electrons


first four dots are for the two s orbital electrons and two p orbital electrons, the final three dots represent paired p orbital electrons

Li Be B C N

O F Ne 4

Lewis Dot Symbols

Ionic Bonding
Na + Cl 2 1

[Ne] 3s

[Ne] 3s 3p5

[Ne]

Na+ Cl
[Ar]

lattice energy is a measure of stabilization

lattice energy the energy required to completely separate


1 mol of solid ionic components into its gaseous ions.
NaCl (s) Na+ (g) + Cl (g) the reverse Na+ (g) + Cl (g) NaCl (s) DH = 788kJ/mol DH = +788kJ/mol

6 ionic substances are brittle, crystalline, with high melting points

Ionic Bonding
The magnitude of the lattice energy of an ionic solid
depends on the charges of the ions, their sizes, and their arrangement in the solid.

The potential energy of two interacting charges is given by


Eel = k Q1Q2 d

Q1Q2 = are the charges on atom 1 and atom 2, d is the distance between them, and k = 8.99 x 109 J-m C2 7

The Crystal Structure of Sodium Chloride

Lattice Energy Diagram for Sodium Chloride Born Haber Cycle

lattice energy

5.2

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Covalent Bonding
most substances have covalent type bonding which means they share electrons.

Electrons that are shared by atoms are called bonding pairs Electrons that are not shared by atoms but belong to a
particular atom are called lone pairs aka nonbonding pairs

Bonding pairs

. . . . . . . . . . . . O .. S . .O..

Lone pairs

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Electronegativity
increase increase

electronegativity the ability of an atom in a molecule to attract electron density toward itself follows electron affinity
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Electronegativities of the Elements

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Electronegativity Difference and Bond Type


pure covalent - electronegativity between bonded atoms is 0 equal sharing nonpolar covalent electronegativity between bonded atoms is 0.1 to 0.4 polar covalent electronegativity between bonded atoms is 0.5 to 1.9

ionic electronegativity between bonded atoms is larger than or equal to 2.0


4% 0 0.4 Percent Ionic Character 51% 2.0 Electronegativity Difference 100% 4.0
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Polar Covalent Bonds


Though atoms often form compounds by sharing electrons, the electrons are not always shared equally. Fluorine pulls harder on the electrons it shares with hydrogen than hydrogen does.

Therefore, the fluorine end of the molecule has more electron density than the hydrogen end.

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Polar Covalent Bonds


When two atoms share electrons unequally, a bond dipole results. The dipole moment, , produced by two equal but opposite charges separated by a distance, r, is calculated:

= Qr
It is measured in debyes (D).

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Polar Covalent Bonds

The greater the difference in electronegativity, the more polar is the bond.

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Lewis Structures

Lewis structures are representations of molecules showing all electrons, bonding and nonbonding.

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Lewis Structures
1. Sum valence electrons from all atoms add or subtract es for charge 2. Determine the central atom 3. Write symbols for the atoms and show which atoms are attached to each other and connect them with a single bond (a dash representing two atoms) subtract from total (2 per dash) 4. Complete octet around all the atoms bonded to the central atom Subtract from the total 5. Place any leftover electrons around the central atom. 6. for any atom lacking an octet form double or triple bonds
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Writing Lewis Structures


1. Find the sum of valence electrons of all atoms in the polyatomic ion or molecule. If it is an anion, add one electron for each negative charge. If it is a cation, subtract one electron for each positive charge.

PCl3
Keep track of the electrons:
5 + 3(7) = 26
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Writing Lewis Structures


2. The central atom is the least electronegative element that isnt hydrogen. Connect the outer atoms to it by single bonds.

Cl

P Cl

Cl

Keep track of the electrons: 26 6 = 20

=
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Writing Lewis Structures


3. Fill the octets of the outer atoms.

Keep track of the electrons: 26 6 = 20; 20 18 = 2


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Writing Lewis Structures


4. Put left over electrons around the central atom.

Keep track of the electrons:


26 6 = 20; 20 18 = 2 place extra e around central atom; 23 22=0

Writing Lewis Structures


5. If you run out of electrons before the central atom has an octet form multiple bonds until it does.

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Writing Lewis Structures


To determine the best Lewis structure assign formal charges.
For each atom, count the electrons in lone pairs and half the electrons it shares with other atoms. Subtract that from the number of valence electrons for that atom: the difference is its formal charge.

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Writing Lewis Structures


The best Lewis structure is the one with the fewest charges. It is best to put a negative charge on the most electronegative atom.

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Resonance
This is the best Lewis structure that can be drawn for ozone, O3.

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Resonance
But this is at odds with the true, observed structure of ozone.

both OO bonds are the same length.


both outer oxygens have a charge of 1/2.

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Resonance
One Lewis structure cannot accurately depict a molecule like ozone. We use multiple structures, resonance structures, to describe the molecule.

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Resonance
Just as green is a synthesis of blue and yellow

ozone is a synthesis of these two resonance structures.

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Resonance
In truth, the electrons that form the second CO bond in the double bonds below do not always sit between that C and that O, but rather can move among the two oxygens and the carbon. They are not localized; they are delocalized.

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Resonance
The organic compound benzene, C6H6, has two resonance structures.

It is commonly depicted as a hexagon with a circle inside to signify the delocalized electrons in the ring.

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Exceptions to the Octet Rule


There are three types of ions or molecules that do not follow the octet rule:

ions or molecules with an odd number of electrons, ions or molecules with less than an octet,

ions or molecules with more than eight valence electrons (an expanded octet).
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Odd Number of Electrons


Though relatively rare and usually quite unstable and reactive, there are ions and molecules with an odd number of electrons.

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Consider BF3:

Giving boron a filled octet places a negative charge on the boron and a positive charge on fluorine. This would not be an accurate picture of the distribution of electrons in BF3.
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Fewer Than Eight Electrons


Therefore, structures that put a double bond between boron and fluorine are much less reasonable than the one that leaves boron with only 6 valence electrons.

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More Than Eight Electrons


The only way PCl5 can exist is if phosphorus has 10 electrons around it. It is allowed to expand the octet of atoms on the third row or below. Presumably d orbitals in these atoms participate in bonding. The octet rule works really well for C, N, O, and F. Atoms after period 2 may or may not have an octet.

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More Than Eight Electrons


Even though we can draw a Lewis structure for the phosphate ion that has only 8 electrons around the central phosphorus, the better structure puts a double bond between the phosphorus and one of the oxygens.

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More Than Eight Electrons


This eliminates the charge on the phosphorus and the charge on one of the oxygens. The lesson is: When the central atom is on the third row or below and expanding its octet eliminates some formal charges, do so.

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Covalent Bond Strength

Most simply, the strength of a bond is measured by determining how much energy is required to break the bond.

This is the bond enthalpy.


The bond enthalpy for a ClCl bond, D(Cl Cl), is measured to be 242 kJ/mol.
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