Ionic Bonding and s-Block Chemistry- Hydrogen Compunds Flashcards

1
Q

Describe why hydrogen doesn’t fit neatly into the Periodic table

A
  1. Has 1S1 which fits with group 1 valence shell configuration
  2. But in chemical terms it does not behave as a group 1 element
  3. It is a gas at RT and pressure whereas group 1 elements are all reactive electropositive metals
  4. Chemistry for group 1 is dominated by M+, but for hydrogen H+ and H- ions are both common as are covalent bonds
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2
Q

Who first observed elemental hydrogen and when

A
  1. Robert Boyle
  2. 1671
  3. Observed formation of a gas when iron filings were dissolved in HCl and demonstrated this gas was flammable
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3
Q

Who is the discovery of hydorgen usually credited to

A
  1. Henry Cavendish- 1766
  2. Showed that the gas produced in this experiment combined with oxygen to form water, disproved the theory that water was an element
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4
Q

Describe main properties of Hydrogen gas

A
  1. Colourless and odourless
  2. Melting point -259 degrees (14K)
  3. Boiling point- -253 (20K)
  4. Generally unreactive at room temperature in the absence of a catalyst
  5. Lowest density of all the gases- as low molecular mass
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5
Q

Why are the melting and boiling points of hydrogen so low

A
  1. Because of the weak intermolecular forces between H2 molecules
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6
Q

Why is H2 generally unreactive at room temperature

A
  1. High H-H bond dissociation enthalpy so high activation energy
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7
Q

What are exceptions to H2 being unreactive at rt

A
  1. O2, F2, Cl2

2. Reacts explosively with all of these

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8
Q

What happens to hydrogen under high pressure

A
  1. H becomes a metallic fluid- on Jupiter

2. Causes a magnetic field

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9
Q

What is the main way to produce hydrogen and give an example

A
  1. Heating natural gas or light crude oil fractions with steam at high temperature over a nickel oxide catalyst
  2. Called steam reforming
  3. CH4(g) + H2O (g) CO (g) + 3H2(g)
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10
Q

What is the shift reaction

A
  1. CO produced from the steam reforming is oxidised to CO2 by reaction with additional steam to generate more hydrogen
  2. Uses an iron catalyst
  3. CO (g) + H2O (g) CO2 (g) + H2 (g)
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11
Q

How else

A
  1. Decomposition of water to hydrogen and oxygen on heating to 2000 degrees
  2. But to high temperature to be commercially viable
  3. But electrolysis can be used
  4. More expensive way than steam reforming, only economically viable when electricity is cheap such as hydroelectric power plants
  5. 2H2O (l) –> 2H2 (g) + O2 (g)
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12
Q

What is the main use of hydrogen

A
  1. Ammonia synthesis- Haber process
  2. In the petrochemical industry (for hydrogenation and desulfurisation reactions)
  3. Extraction of metals from ores
  4. Production of methanol
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13
Q

What are the binary compounds that hydrogen form called

A
  1. Hydrides
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14
Q

What is hydrogens electronegativity

A
  1. 2.20

2. In the middle of the elements

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15
Q

How is the hydrogen atom describe if it forms a binary compound with a more electropositive atom (Li)

A
  1. Hydridic

2. Oxidation state of -1

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16
Q

How is the hydrogen atom describe if it forms a binary compound with a more electronegative atom (Cl)

A
  1. Protic
  2. Oxidation state of +1
  3. The bond is polarised with hydrogen atom delta+
17
Q

Describe hydridic hydrides

A
  1. Formed by group 1 and 2 metals
  2. Typically ionic structure
  3. Group 1 hydrides are strongly basic and react with water forming hydrogen and an alkaline solution
  4. The reactivity increases down the group and NaH can ignite in moist air
  5. So need to be used under an inert atmosphere
18
Q

Show the equation for the reaction of LiH with water

A
  1. LiH (s) + H2O (l) –> LiOH (aq) + H2 (g)
19
Q

Describe protic hydrides

A
  1. Ionisation enthalpy of hydrogen is very high and much larger than the electron gain enthalpy.
  2. Means it is difficult to produce an H+ ion so protic hydrides are covalent rather than ionic
  3. Ions are only formed when the compound is dissolved in a solvent that is able to solvate the protons, and when this occurs the compounds act as acids
    e. g. HCl + H2O –> H3O+ + Cl-
20
Q

Describe non-polar hydrides

A
  1. When hydrogen is bonded to an element with a similar electronegativity, the bonds are largely non-polar
  2. May have a small dipole where hydrogen can be either delta+/-
21
Q

Describe the nomenclature for hydride compounds

A
  1. Hydridic compounds are simply called hydrides
  2. When H atom is protic or X-H bond is almost non-polar, the systematic name for the compound ends in -ane
  3. Group 17 and most group 16 hydrides have 2-word names with ‘hydrogen’ followed by the other element with an -ide ending
  4. For many compounds trivial names are almost always used.
22
Q

What are the classes of covalent hydrides

A
  1. Electron-precise compound
  2. Electron-deficient compound
  3. Electron-rich compound
23
Q

Describe electron-precise hydrides

A
  1. All the valence electrons of the central atom are involved in forming bonds
  2. Group 14 hydrides are electron precise
24
Q

Describe electron-deficient compounds

A
  1. 3-centre 2-electron bonds are present

2. BeH2 and group 13 hydrides are electron deficient

25
Q

Describe electron-rich compounds

A
  1. Not all of the electrons are involved in bonding, so there are lone pairs present
  2. This means that electron-rich hydrides can act as Lewis bases
  3. Hydrides in Group 15-17 are electron rich
26
Q

Describe the trends in acidity for hydrides

A
  1. Hydrides become more acidic going left to right across the row.
  2. This is due to the increasing polarisation of the X-H bond
  3. Hydrides become more acidic going up a group.
  4. This is due to a decrease in bond dissociation enthalpy and decreasing attraction between X- and H3O+
27
Q

Describe the trends in bond strength of hydrides

A
  1. Bond dissociation enthalpies generally increase from left to right across a row.
  2. This is due to the increasing ionic contribution to the bonding as electronegativity of X increases
  3. Bond dissociation enthalpies generally decrease going down a group.
  4. The valence orbitals of the atoms getting larger and more diffuse with increasing principal quantum number,n. This means that the interactions of these ns and np orbitals with the hydrogen 1s orbitals are reduced going down a group.
28
Q

Describe the isotopes of hydrogen

A
  1. There are 3 isotopes
  2. Vast majority is 1H (protium)
  3. Small fraction is deuterium 2H or D contains a neutron as well as proton
  4. Radioactive isotope tritium 3H or T, naturally occurs in miniscule amounts but can be prepared artificially
29
Q

Describe why there are differences in properties between the isotopes of hydrogen

A
  1. Despite having same number of electrons they have different properties because of big difference in mass
  2. Deuterium has twice the mass of a normal hydrogen, so isotope effects are far more important in hydrogen compounds than for other elements
30
Q

What are some of the different properties between hydrogen isotopes

A
  1. D2O is denser than H2O
  2. Bond dissociation enthalpy of D2 is slightly higher than for H2
  3. They are different because the zero point of energy of a D-D bond is lower than that for H-H bond. The bond dissociation enthalpy for any X-D bond is greater than that for the corresponding X-H bond, so more energy is needed to break it