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Bonding

Bonding. Chapter 6. Chemical Bonds. All types of chemical bonds form due to the mutual attraction between the nucleus of one atom and valence electrons of another atom. Ionic Bonds. Ionic bonds form when electrons are transferred from one atom to another.

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Bonding

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  1. Bonding Chapter 6

  2. Chemical Bonds • All types of chemical bonds form due to the mutual attraction between the nucleus of one atom and valence electrons of another atom.

  3. Ionic Bonds • Ionic bonds form when electrons are transferred from one atom to another. • A metal will lose electrons and form a cation • A nonmetal will gain electrons and form an anion

  4. Ion charges • When an ion forms it usually has an octet of electrons in its valence shell. • An octet (8 electrons) would result from a full s and p sublevel in the outermost energy level. What is the charge on the fluorine ion? What is the charge on the strontium ion? F- Sr2+

  5. Ionic Compounds • Ionic compounds form when the cation and anion stick together due to the electrostatic attraction between the oppositely charged ions. • The overall compound will be neutral. NaBr AlCl3 Ca3N2

  6. Ionic Crystals • Ionic solids contain cations and anions that are arranged in an organized three dimensional crystal lattice. • Within the lattice, each cation is surrounded by anions and vice-versa.

  7. Ionic Bond Strength • Lattice energy is the energy released when one mole of an ionic compound is formed from gaseous ions. • The greater the lattice energy the stronger the ionic bond.

  8. (Honors) • Lattice energy is affected by two variables; the ions’ charges and the ions’ radii. • The greater the charges, the greater the LE. LENaCl LEMgCl2 • The smaller the radii, the greater the LE. LENaCl LELiCl < <

  9. Covalent Bonds • Covalent bonds result from the sharing of electrons between two atoms • Covalent bonding occurs when nonmetal atoms are bonded together • There are two types of covalent bonds; and nonpolar covalent bonds polar covalent bonds

  10. Nonpolar Covalent Bonds • In a nonpolar covalent bond, electrons are shared equally between the atoms. • This results in a balanced electron distribution

  11. Polar Covalent Bonds • In a polar covalent bond, electrons are shared unequally • This results in an uneven charge distribution (one end is positive and the other is negative)

  12. Electronegativity • Def: the ability of an atom in a compound to attract electrons from another atom • Values given on page 161 in text

  13. Electronegativity differences between atoms in a compound can help us predict the type of bond present Nonpolar ~ 0-0.3 Polar~ 0.3-1.7 ionic ~ 1.7 +

  14. Lewis Dot Diagrams • Show how atoms are bonded together in a molecule. • A dot represents a valence electron • A pair of dots between two atom symbols represents a bond between the atoms

  15. Drawing Lewis Diagrams • Step 1: determine the total number of valence electrons in the molecule • Step 2: Arrange element symbols to form a skeleton structure • If carbon is present, it should go in the center • Hydrogen atoms should always be on the edge of the molecule. Halogens usually are on an edge. • Otherwise, molecules tend to be somewhat symmetrical

  16. Step 3: Put one pair of electrons between adjacent atoms • Step 4: Add unshared pairs (lone pairs) to the outside of each atom until each atom has a total of 8 electrons (an octet), except hydrogen will have 2 (a duet).

  17. Step 5: Count all the electrons you have drawn • If that equals the amount that you had available from Step 1, you are done! • If you have drawn too many dots, you must make double and/or triple bonds until you have the proper number of electrons present. For every additional bond made, you will remove two lone pairs of electrons

  18. HONORS – Exceptions to the Octet Rule • Some molecules will not obey the octet rule. (They often have a noble gas in them.) • If you complete Step 4 and in Step 5 you have fewer electrons shown in your diagram that you counted from Step 1, you will need to place all extra electrons (in pairs) around the central atom.

  19. VSEPR • Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory • States that regions of electrons around the central atom of a molecule will be arranged as far apart as possible • Determines the shapes of molecules

  20. Hybridization • When a molecule is formed, the atomic orbitals (s, p, etc) from the individual atoms combine with each other to make new orbitals called hybrid orbitals • Hybridization must occur because the shapes of atomic orbitals does NOT explain the molecular shapes.

  21. sp3 hybridization • If there are four regions of high electron density around the central atom, then 1 s-orbital has hybridized with 3 p-orbitals resulting in 4 sp3 orbitals arranged tetrahedrally

  22. sp2 hybridization • If there are three regions of high electron density around the central atom, then 1 s-orbital has hybridized with 2 p-orbitals resulting in 3 sp2 orbitals arranged in a trigonal pyramid

  23. sp hybridization • If there are two regions of high electron density around the central atom, then 1 s-orbital has hybridized with 1 p-orbital resulting in 2 sp orbitals arranged linearly

  24. Sigma vs Pi Bonding • A sigma (s) bond occurs when electron density lies between the nuclei of the bonded atoms. • All single bonds are s-bonds.

  25. Pi (p) bonding occurs when orbitals overlap above and below the line between the nuclei

  26. All double bonds contain 1 s and 1 p bond • All triple bonds contain 1 s and 2 p bonds • The s-bond forms from the overlap of the hybrid orbitals while the p-bonds form from the overlap of the unhybridized p-orbitals

  27. Molecular Polarity Cl H • Dipoles are polar molecules. • A dipole exists when there is an asymmetrical charge distribution in the molecule • For a molecule to be a dipole it must contain at least one polar bond and must have an asymmetrical shape O H H

  28. Examples of Dipoles

  29. Examples of Nonpolar Molecules

  30. Intermolecular Forces • def: The forces of attraction that exist between molecules. • Intermolecular forces are weaker than a covalent or ionic bond • There are three types of intermolecular forces: • Dipole-Dipole Forces • Hydrogen Bonding • London Dispersion Forces

  31. Dipole-Dipole Forces • Exists between two dipoles (polar molecules) • The positive end of one molecule is attracted to the negative end of another molecule • The greater the polarity of the molecule, the stronger the dipole-dipole force

  32. Hydrogen Bonding • Def: a hydrogen atom bonded to a highly electronegative atom (F, O, or N) is attracted to an unshared pair of electrons on the F, O, or N of a nearby molecule. • H-bonding is a very strong type of dipole-dipole force.

  33. London Dispersion Forces • A weak intermolecular force that results from a momentary (temporary) dipole. • All molecules both polar and nonpolar experience LDFs, but this is the ONLY type of intermolecular force that nonpolar molecules experience. • The larger the molecular mass, the stronger the LDFs. A temporary uneven electron distribution results in a momentary dipole one momentary dipole can cause another nearby molecule to also have a momentary dipole

  34. Metallic Bonding • The bonding in metals consists of a crystal lattice of metal ions immersed in a sea of delocalized, mobile valence electrons • These mobile electrons are able to flow throughout the sample allowing metals to conduct electricity

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