Chemical Bonding I: Basic Concepts
Chemical Bonding I: Basic Concepts
Chemical Bonding I: Basic Concepts
Basic Concepts
Chapter 9
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Valence electrons are the outer shell electrons of an
atom. The valence electrons are the electrons that
participate in chemical bonding.
Group e- configuration # of valence e-
1A ns1 1
2A ns2 2
3A ns2np1 3
4A ns2np2 4
5A ns2np3 5
6A ns2np4 6
7A ns2np5 7
9.1
Lewis Dot Symbols for the Representative Elements &
Noble Gases
9.1
The Lewis dot symbol for the a lead atom is
Li + F Li+ F -
1s22s1s
1 22s22p5 1s2[2Ne]
[He]
1s 2s22p6
Li Li+ + e-
e- + F F -
Li+ + F - Li+ F -
9.2
Which of these pairs of elements would be most
likely to form an ionic compound?
A. Cl and I
B. Al and K
C. Cl and Mg
D. C and S
E. Al and Mg
Which of these pairs of elements would be most
likely to form an ionic compound?
A. Cl and I
B. Al and K
C. Cl and Mg
D. C and S
E. Al and Mg
Electrostatic (Lattice) Energy
Lattice energy (E) is the energy required to completely separate
one mole of a solid ionic compound into gaseous ions.
A. NaCl
B. NaF
C. CaBr2
D. CsI
E. CaCl2
Which of these ionic solids would have
the largest lattice energy?
A. NaCl
B. NaF
C. CaBr2
D. CsI
E. CaCl2
Which of these solids would have
the highest melting point?
A. NaI
B. NaF
C. MgO
D. MgCl2
E. KF
Which of these solids would have
the highest melting point?
A. NaI
B. NaF
C. MgO
D. MgCl2
E. KF
Born-Haber Cycle for Determining Lattice Energy
o
DHoverall = DHo1 + DHo2 + DHo3 + DHo4 + DHo5
9.3
9.3
Calculate the energy change for the reaction
A. -1,092 kJ/mol
B. -95 kJ/mol
C. 95 kJ/mol
D. 1,092 kJ/mol
E. 1,187 kJ/mol
Calculate the energy change for the reaction
A. -1,092 kJ/mol
B. -95 kJ/mol
C. 95 kJ/mol
D. 1,092 kJ/mol
E. 1,187 kJ/mol
Calculate the energy change for the reaction
A. -124 kJ/mol
B. -715 kJ/mol
C. 715 kJ/mol
D. 1429 kJ/mol
E. none of these
Calculate the energy change for the reaction
A. -124 kJ/mol
B. -715 kJ/mol
C. 715 kJ/mol
D. 1429 kJ/mol
E. none of these
Chemistry In Action:
Sodium Chloride
F + F F F
7e- 7e- 8e- 8e-
Lewis structure of F2
9.4
Lewis structure of water single covalent bonds
H + O + H H O H or H O H
2e-8e-2e-
O C O or O C O
8e- 8ebonds
double - 8e- double bonds
N N or N N
8e-8e
triple -
bond
triple bond
9.4
Lengths of Covalent Bonds
Bond Lengths
Triple bond < Double Bond < Single Bond 9.4
9.4
Polar covalent bond or polar bond is a covalent
bond with greater electron density around one of the
two atoms
electron rich
electron poor
region
region e- poor e- rich
H F H F
d+ d-
9.5
Electronegativity is the ability of an atom to attract
toward itself the electrons in a chemical bond.
X (g) + e- X-(g)
9.5
The Electronegativities of Common Elements
9.5
Variation of Electronegativity with Atomic Number
9.5
Classification of bonds by difference in electronegativity
9.5
Writing Lewis Structures
F N F
9.6
Write the Lewis structure of the carbonate ion (CO32-).
Step 1 C is less electronegative than O, put C in center
Step 2 Count valence electrons C - 4 (2s22p2) and O - 6 (2s22p4)
-2 charge 2e-
4 + (3 x 6) + 2 = 24 valence electrons
Step 3 Draw single bonds between C and O atoms and complete
octet on C and O atoms.
Step 4 - Check, are # of e- in structure equal to number of valence e- ?
3 single bonds (3x2) + 10 lone pairs (10x2) = 26 valence electrons
Step 5 - Too many electrons, form double bond and re-check # of e-
H
H C O H C O
H
formal charge
on O
= 6 -2 - x 6 = +1
9.7
H 0 0 C 4 e- 2 single bonds (2x2) = 4
C O O 6 e- 1 double bond = 4
H 2H 2x1 e- 2 lone pairs (2x2) = 4
12 e- Total = 12
formal charge
on O
= 6 -4 - x 4 = 0
9.7
Formal Charge and Lewis Structures
1. For neutral molecules, a Lewis structure in which there
are no formal charges is preferable to one in which
formal charges are present.
2. Lewis structures with large formal charges are less
plausible than those with small formal charges.
3. Among Lewis structures having similar distributions of
formal charges, the most plausible structure is the one in
which negative formal charges are placed on the more
electronegative atoms.
Which is the most likely Lewis structure for CH2O?
-1 +1 H 0 0
H C O H C O
H
9.7
A resonance structure is one of two or more Lewis structures
for a single molecule that cannot be represented accurately by
only one Lewis structure.
+ - - +
O O O O O O
- - - -
O C O O C O O C O
O O O
- - 9.8
Exceptions to the Octet Rule
Be 2e-
BeH2 2H 2x1e- H Be H
4e-
9.9
Exceptions to the Octet Rule
Odd-Electron Molecules
N 5e-
NO O 6e- N O
11e-
The Expanded Octet (central atom with principal quantum number n > 2)
F
F F
S 6e- 6 single bonds (6x2) = 12
SF6 6F 42e- S 18 lone pairs (18x2) = 36
48e- Total = 48
F F
F
9.9
Chemistry In Action: Just Say NO
Bond Energy
H2 (g) H (g) + H (g) DH0 = 436.4 kJ
Cl2 (g) Cl (g) + Cl (g) DH0 = 242.7 kJ
HCl (g) H (g) + Cl (g) DH0 = 431.9 kJ
O2 (g) O (g) + O (g) DH0 = 498.7 kJ O O
N2 (g) N (g) + N (g) DH0 = 941.4 kJ N N
Bond Energies
Single bond < Double bond < Triple bond
9.10
Average bond energy in polyatomic molecules
9.10
Bond Energies (BE) and Enthalpy changes in reactions
Imagine reaction proceeding by breaking all bonds in the
reactants and then using the gaseous atoms to form all the
bonds in the products.
DH0 = total energy input total energy released
= SBE(reactants) SBE(products)
9.10
H2 (g) + Cl2 (g) 2HCl (g) 2H2 (g) + O2 (g) 2H2O (g)
9.10
Use bond energies to calculate the enthalpy change for:
H2 (g) + F2 (g) 2HF (g)
9.10