1 / 15

Polarity and Molecular Shape in Covalent Molecules

Polarity and Molecular Shape in Covalent Molecules. Chemistry. Covalent Bonds. A covalent bond is a bond formed by sharing electrons between atoms. A molecule is group of atoms held together by covalent bonds.

presley
Télécharger la présentation

Polarity and Molecular Shape in Covalent Molecules

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Polarity and Molecular Shape in Covalent Molecules Chemistry

  2. Covalent Bonds • A covalent bond is a bond formed by sharing electrons between atoms. • A moleculeis group of atoms held together by covalent bonds. • Nonmetals form covalent bonds with nonmetals. They reach the Noble Gas electron configuration by sharing an appropriate number of electrons.

  3. Multiple Covalent Bonds • Single bond: A bond formed by sharing two electrons or one pair – represented by a single line between the atoms. • Double bond: A bond formed by sharing four electrons or two pairs – represented by two lines (=) between the atoms. • Triple bond: A bond formed by sharing six electrons or 3 pairs – represented by 3 lines between the atoms.

  4. Covalent Bonding Notes (continued)

  5. Molecular and Structural Formulas • Molecular formula: A formula that shows that number and kind of atoms in a molecule • Structural formula: Molecular representation that shows the connections among atoms by using lines to represent covalent bonds • Example for water: • H2O = molecular formula • H-O-H = structural formula

  6. Shape of Molecules • Molecular shapes can be predicted by noting how many bonds and electron pairs surround individual atoms and applying the valence-shell electron-pair repulsion (VSEPR) theory • Basic idea of VSEPR: negatively charged electron clouds in bonds and lone pairs repel each other, keeping them as far apart as possible

  7. VSEPR Rules - a way to predict the shape of a molecule(like the balloon activity we will do) • To apply VSEPR Theory: • 1. Draw the Electron Dot Diagram of the molecule and identify the central atom. • 2. Count the number of electron charge clouds (lone and bonding pairs) surrounding the central atom. • 3. Predict molecular shape by assuming that clouds orient so they are as far away from one another as possible.

  8. VSEPR Shape Predictor Table

  9. Example (use balloons) • Ammonia: NH3 • 1. Draw Lewis Dot Structure • 2. Count electron charge clouds (bonds and lone pairs: 4 • The 4 electron pairs are at the corners of a tetrahedron • Electron pair geometry: Tetrahedral geometry • Molecular geometry: Pyramidal geometry Lone pair N H H H

  10. Polar Covalent Bonds and Electronegativity • Electrons in a covalent bond occupy the region between the bonded atoms. • If atoms in bond are identical (H2, Cl2, etc.), electrons are attracted equally to both atoms and are shared equally. • If atoms in bond are different (HCl, HF, etc.), electrons may be attracted more strongly by one atom than by the other and are shared unequally. • Such bonds are known as polar covalent bonds.

  11. Polarity of HCl • H------- Cl • H side is electron poor (partial positive charge) • Cl side is electron rich,(partial negative charge) • Because Cl has a greater electronegativity than H, so it wants electrons more than H, or pulls themtowards itself

  12. Electronegativities on the Periodic table

  13. Polar Molecules • Entire molecule can be polar if electrons are attracted more strongly to one part of the molecule than the other. • Molecule’s polarity is due to the sum of all individual bond polarities AND lone-pair contributions in the molecule.

  14. Show polarity with an arrow • Molecular polarity is represented by an arrow pointing at the negative end and is crossed at the positive end to resemble a positive sign.

  15. Resource for Notes • http://classes.mhcc.edu/enh/ch104_mr/pdf104/Ch05.pdf

More Related