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Covalent Bonding

Covalent Bonding. …electrons are shared. Terms. Valence electrons - in the outer shell/orbital Nonmetals – on the right side of the p.t. Noble gases – group 18, have 8 valence e -. Valence electrons 3 4 5 6 7 8. Nonmetals. Covalent bonds.

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Covalent Bonding

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  1. Covalent Bonding …electrons are shared

  2. Terms • Valence electrons - in the outer shell/orbital • Nonmetals – on the right side of the p.t. • Noble gases – group 18, have 8 valence e- Valence electrons 3 4 5 6 7 8 Nonmetals

  3. Covalent bonds • Nonmetals hold onto their valence electrons. • They can’t give away electrons to bond. • Still want noble gas configuration. • Get it by sharing valence electrons with each other. • By sharing both atoms get to count the electrons toward noble gas configuration.

  4. Covalent Bonding • In a covalent bond the electrons are the “glue” that holds the atoms together. • Only nonmetals and Hydrogen. • Different from an ionic bond because they actually form molecules. G.N. Lewis

  5. Covalent Bonding: Hydrogen H• + H•  H : H • The two electrons are shared evenly between the two hydrogen atoms. • It is as if each atom has two electrons – the noble gas configuration of [He]. H : H

  6. Lewis Structures • A Lewis structure is a way of drawing a molecule that shows all valence electrons as dots or lines that represent valence electrons. eg. The Lewis structure for H2 can be drawn in two ways: H : H or H–H A single line represents two covalently shared electrons – also known as a single bond.

  7. Lewis Structures • The Lewis Structure for F2: • Two electrons are shared between the two F atoms (one single covalent bond). • Each F atom also has three unshared electron pairs. These non-bonding electron pairs are called lone pairs.

  8. Single Covalent Bond • A sharing of two valence electrons. • Two specific atoms are joined.

  9. The Octet Rule • Note that by sharing electrons, it is as if each F atom has eight electrons - the noble gas configuration. • The Octet Rule: Main group elements with more than two valence electrons gain, lose, or share electrons to achieve a noble gas configuration characterized by eight valence electrons.

  10. F F Covalent bonding • Fluorine has seven valence electrons • A second atom also has seven By sharing electrons …both end with full orbitals 8 Valence electrons 8 Valence electrons

  11. How to show how they formed • It’s like a jigsaw puzzle. • You have to know what the final formula is. • You put the pieces together to end up with the right formula. • For example- show how water is formed with covalent bonds.

  12. H O Water H2O Each hydrogen has 1 valence electron Each hydrogen wants 1 more The oxygen has 6 valence electrons The oxygen wants 2 more They share to make each other happy

  13. H O Water H2O • Put the pieces together • The first hydrogen is happy • The oxygen still wants one more

  14. H O H O H H Water • The second hydrogen attaches • Every atom has full energy levels • A pair of electrons is a single bond

  15. Multiple Bonds • Sometimes atoms share more than one pair of valence electrons. • A double bond is when atoms share two pair (4) of electrons. • A triple bond is when atoms share three pair (6) of electrons.

  16. C O Carbon dioxide CO2 • Carbon is central atom • Carbon has 4 valence electrons • Wants 4 more • Oxygen has 6 valence electrons • Wants 2 more

  17. O Carbon dioxide • Attaching 1 oxygen leaves the oxygen 1 short and the carbon 3 short C

  18. O O Carbon dioxide • Attaching the second oxygen leaves both oxygen 1 short and the carbon 2 short C

  19. 8 valence electrons 8 valence electrons 8 valence electrons O Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more • Requires two double bonds • Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond O C

  20. Lewis Structures

  21. How to draw them • Add up all the valence electrons. • Count up the total number of electrons needed to make all atoms have 8. • Subtract. • Divide by 2 • This tells you how many bonds to draw. • Fill in the rest of the valence electrons to fill atoms up.

  22. Tips for Lewis Structures • Group 14 almost always goes in the center • Hydrogen and halogens always go on the outside. • Hydrogen and halogens only form 1 bond • Group 15 always has 1 lone pair • Group 16 always has 2 lone pairs • Group 17 (halogens) always has 3 lone pairs

  23. Examples • NH3 • N - has 5 valence electrons wants 8 • H - has 1 valence electrons wants 2 • NH3 has 5+(3*1) = 8 • NH3 wants 8+(3*2) = 14 • (14-8)/2= 3 bonds • 4 atoms with 3 bonds N H

  24. Examples • Draw in the bonds • All 8 electrons are accounted for • Everything is full H H N H

  25. Examples HCN • C is central atom • C - has 4 valence electrons wants 8 • N - has 5 valence electrons wants 8 • H - has 1 valence electrons wants 2 • HCNhas 1+4+5 = 10 • HCNwants 2+8+8 = 18 • (18-10)/2= 4 bonds • 3 atoms with 4 bonds -will require multiple bonds (not to H)

  26. HCN • Put in single bonds • Need 2 more bonds • Must go between C and N H C N

  27. HCN • Put in single bonds • Need 2 more bonds • Must go between C and N • Uses 8 electrons - 2 more to add H C N

  28. HCN • Put in single bonds • Need 2 more bonds • Must go between C and N • Uses 8 electrons - 2 more to add • Must go on N to fill octet H C N

  29. Another way of indicating bonds • Often use a line to indicate a bond • Called a structural formula • Each line is 2 valence electrons H O H H O H 

  30. Structural Examples • C has 8 electrons because each line is 2 electrons • Ditto for N • Ditto for C here • Ditto for O H C N H C O H

  31. Draw a Lewis structure for methane (CH4) that obeys the octet rule.

  32. Draw a valid Lewis structure for formaldehyde (CH2O).

  33. Draw a Lewis structure for Sulfur Dichloride (SCl2).

  34. Draw a Lewis structure for Phosphorus Trifluoride (PF3).

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