Structure and Bonding, Shapes and IM forces (5.2,5.3, Chapter 6 + 7.3) Flashcards
What is covalent bonding?
The strong electrostatic attraction between a shared pair of electrons and the nuclei of the bonded atoms
What is the name for a covalent compound with less than 8 electrons in the outer shell e.g. BF3 with 6 electrons?
Electron deficient compounds
What happens to the electronic configuration in BF3?
It stays the same, 1s2, 2s2, 2p1
What is actually happening in BF3?
The 2s and 2p orbitals become hybridised orbitals called “sp2” with one electron in each orbital
What is the name for a covalent compound with more than 8 electrons in its outer shell e.g. PCL5 or SF6?
Expanding the octet
Which elements can expand their octets and why?
Period 3,4 and 5 elements because they have low-lying d-orbitals (in the 3rd or more shell) which the extra electrons can be in, there can be up to 18 electrons in the outer shell
e.g. P, S and Cl
What is the difference between a lone pair and a bonding pair of electrons?
A lone pair is a pair of electrons not bonded to another atom (and often becomes a dative bond) e.g. ••
A bonding pair is pair of electrons bonded to two atoms in a covalent bond e.g. •x
What are double/triple covalent bonds?
- When the electrostatic attraction is between two/three shared pairs of electron and the nuclei of bonded atoms -
- Bonds that contain more than one shared pair of electrons between two atoms e.g. O2, N2 and CO2
What is a dative covalent bond/coordinate bond?
- A covalent bond in which the shared pair of electrons has been supplied by one of the bonding atoms only
- The shared electron pair was originally a lone pair of electrons from one of the bonded atoms
When does dative bonding occur?
When one atom or compound has at least one lone pair of electrons (or just a full outer shell) is covalently bonded to another atom or compound which needs electrons
What happens when NH3 becomes NH4+?
NH3 has a lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen
An H+ ion has no electrons in its outer shell
The H+ is datively bonded to the lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen to form NH4+
NH4+ has a positive charge because hydrogen has lost one electron
How do you draw a dative bond in a display formulae?
Instead of a line, an arrow is drawn starting at the atom which is donating the pair of electrons (at the lone pair) and goes towards the atom receiving the pair of electrons
What is the theory that describes the shapes of molecules?
VSEPR theory
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory
What is the shape and bond angle of a molecule with 2 electron pairs?
Linear, 180 e.g. CO2
What is the shape and bond angle of a molecule with 3 electron pairs?
Trigonal planar, 120 e.g. BF3
What is the shape and bond angle of a molecule with 4 electron pairs?
Tetrahedral, 109.5 e.g. CH4
What is the shape and bond angle of a molecule with 6 electron pairs?
Octahedral, 90 e.g. SF6
How do electron pairs interact?
Electron pairs repel each other as far apart as possible
What is the repulsion order for electron pairs?
L.p - L.p > L.p. - B.p > B.p - B.p
What happens when lone pairs are present?
The lone pair(s) repels the bonding pairs more so the bond angles are smaller as the bonding pairs are pushed closer together
What is the shape and and bond angle of a molecule when there is 1 lone pair and 3 bonding pairs?
Pyramidal, 107
What is the shape and bond angle of a molecule when there are 2 lone pairs and 2 bonding pairs?
Non-linear (bent), 104.5
What is the process for working out the shape and bond angle of a molecule?
1) dot and cross diagram
2) count the total number of electron pairs (bonding and lone)
3) based on the number of electron pairs, decide the overall base shape and starting bond angle
4) subtract 2.5 from the starting bond angle for each lone pair to get the bond angle of the molecule
What is electronegativity?
The ability of an atom to attract the bonding electrons in a covalent bond
What factors determine electronegativity?
Atomic radius and nuclear charge
What are the three most electronegative elements in decreasing order?
Fluorine, oxygen and nitrogen
What is a polar bond?
- When the bonded electron pair is shared unequally between the bonded atoms
- A covalent bond between two atoms of different electronegativities where the shared, bonding electrons are pulled towards the more electronegative atom
What is a permanent dipole caused by?
The difference in electronegativity between the two atoms in a polar bond
What is a dipole?
- The separation of opposite charges
- An uneven distribution of electrons in a covalent bond causing a difference in charge between the atoms. The more electronegative atom therefore has a slightly negative charge and the less electronegative atom has a slightly positive charge
What makes a bond more polar?
A greater difference in electronegativity
Why are the covalent bonds in diatomic elements non-polar? (pure covalent bond)
The bonded atoms come from the same element and the electron pair is shared equally
What happens in ionic substances?
The electrons move over entirely to the negative ion as there is such a large difference in electronegativity
What determines whether or not a molecule has an overall (molecular) dipole?
The arrangement of the polar bonds
When does the molecule have no overall (molecular) dipole and is non-polar?
When the polar bonds are arranged symmetrically so that the dipoles cancel each other out
When does a molecule have an overall dipole and is polar?
When the polar bonds are arranged so that they don’t cancel each other out so charge is arranged unevenly across the whole molecule
Why can only bonds between atoms of a single element, like diatomic gases, be purely covalent?
Because electronegativity difference between the atoms is zero and so the bonding electrons are arranged completely evenly within the bond
What are the three types of intermolecular forces?
Induced dipole-dipole interactions (London forces)
Permanent dipole-dipole interactions
Hydrogen bonds
What happens during induced dipole-dipole interactions?
1) Random movement of e- causes an instantaneous dipole in one molecule (but its position is constantly shifting)
2) The instantaneous dipole induces a dipole in neighbouring molecules
3) Opposite partial charges cause weak electrostatic attraction between neighbouring particles
4) The induced dipole induces further dipoles on neighbouring molecules, which then attract one another
Why do induced dipole-dipole interactions increase as you go down the group?
As you go down a group, there are more electrons so there are stronger dipoles therefore stronger intermolecular forces (induced dipole-dipole interactions) and therefore more energy is needed to overcome these forces
What are permanent dipole-dipole interactions?
The slight positive and slight negative charges on polar molecules cause weak electrostatic forces of attraction between molecules
How does surface area affect London forces?
Molecules with a greater surface are have stronger London forces because they have a bigger exposed electron cloud
What happens when you boil a liquid?
You need to overcome the intermolecular forces so that the particles can escape from the liquid surface
Why is ice less dense than water?
- Hydrogen bonds hold water molecules apart in an open lattice structure - each water molecule can form 4 H-bonds
- The water molecules in ice are further apart than in water because the open lattice structure holds the molecules further apart as the water forms more H-bonds
- Therefore, solid ice is less dense than liquid water and floats
Why does water have relatively high melting and boiling points?
- Water has hydrogen bonds as well as London forces
- A Large amount of energy is needed to break the hydrogen bonds in water, so water has a much higher than expected boiling point/melting point