Bonding – forces that hold atoms together 1.ionic 2.covalent 3.metallic ionic bonding – ions that are held together via unlike charges.

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Presentation transcript:

bonding – forces that hold atoms together 1.ionic 2.covalent 3.metallic ionic bonding – ions that are held together via unlike charges

Lewis dot symbol – shorthand method of showing the number of valence electrons available for bonding in atoms Gilbert Lewis 1875 – 1946

octet rule – atoms gain or lose or share electrons in an effort to obtain 8 valence electrons What is so special about 8 valence electrons ? 8 valence electrons = noble gas configuration noble gas configuration is energetically stable !

Determine the empirical formula expected for a compound containing Ca and F.

covalent bonding – 2 electrons are “ shared ” between 2 atoms. Covalently bound species are different than ionic exist as individual, discrete species (vs. 3-D crystal lattice structure for ionic) tend to exhibit much lower melting and boiling points (vs. ionic)

single bond – 2 electrons (1 pair of electrons) are shared between 2 atoms double bond – 4 electrons (2 pairs of electrons) are shared between 2 atoms triple bond – 6 electrons (3 pairs of electrons) are shared between 2 atoms

 a double bond is shorter and stronger than a single bond  a triple bond is shorter and stronger than a double bond

Cl 2 nonpolar bond – electrons are shared equally in the bond polar bond – electrons are NOT shared equally HCl

Linus Pauling 1901 – 1994 electronegativity – the ability of an element to attract electron density to itself in a molecule

electronegativity increases from left right electronegativity decreases from top bottom electronegativity – the ability of an element to attract electron density to itself in a molecule

Arrange the following in order of increasing electronegativity: Na, F, O, K, Al, Si, Mg

Drawing Lewis Structures 1.count the total number of valence electrons 2.make an intelligent guess as to the central element and connectivity a) heavier element is often the central element b) many molecules are symmetric 3.Add electron pairs to satisfy octet rule 4.start making multiple bonds (first double, then triple if single bonds not getting the job done.) 5.Do NOT (under any circumstance …..ever) form a multiple bond to a halogen or hydrogen

Draw the Lewis structure for F 2 bonding pair of e - – e - that hold two atoms (bonding pair) together nonbonding pair of e - – e - that are NOT holding (lone pair) 2 atoms together

Draw the Lewis structure for H 2 O

Draw the Lewis structure for ethene, C 2 H 4

Draw the Lewis structure for PO 4 3 -

Draw the Lewis structure for NO +

Draw the Lewis structure for PF 5 octet expansion – some atoms can exceed 8 valence electrons (usually P & S)

Draw the Lewis structure for BCl 3

Resonance – the “ real ” molecule can NOT be described by a single Lewis structure Consider NO 2 -

Barium + Cobalt + Nitrogen Ba 2+ + Co + + N 3   BaCoN The only ionic compound you ever really need !!

Determine the Lewis structure for NO 2 - What are your bond expectations for nitrite ?

A single Lewis structure can NOT be drawn to describe the “real” nitrite species go to lab and measure the actual bond lengths in a real nitrite anion The N-O bonds in nitrite are identical (in every sense; same length; same strength)

The Real molecule is somewhere in between these two extremes