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Ch. 6.5b Hybrid Orbitals and Intermolecular Forces
Chemical Bonding
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POINT > Describe the concept of hybrid orbitals
POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces POINT > Review polar covalent bonding POINT > Relate intermolecular forces to changes of state
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POINT > Describe the concept of hybrid orbitals
Previously you learned that methane (CH4) has a tetrahedral geometry with all bond angles = 109.5ᵒ You have also learned that the four valence e- of a carbon atom have a 2s22p2 arrangement This is a problem. How can 4 e- in different sublevels, with different energies, result in four identical bonding orbitals?
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Linus Pauling (1916 – 1994) TWO Introduced: Hybrid orbitals
Nobel Prizes!! Introduced: Hybrid orbitals Concept of electronegativity Idea that most covalent bonds have some ionic character Resonance structures
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POINT > Describe the concept of hybrid orbitals
Orbital hybridization: Several (different) atomic orbitals combine to form the same number of equivalent hybrid bonding orbitals Carbon 2s22p2 2s12p3 Mix to form four equal sp3 hybrid orbitals
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POINT > Describe the concept of hybrid orbitals
Methane (CH4)
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WB CHECK: When a carbon atom is bonded to four atoms, as in carbon tetrachloride CCl4 the s and p orbitals of C each get 2 Cl the s and p orbitals of C form two hybrid orbitals the s and p orbitals of C form 4 hybrid orbitals the s and p orbitals of C overlap
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Linus Pauling won his first Nobel Prize for his work
WB CHECK: Linus Pauling won his first Nobel Prize for his work on DNA structure on chemical bonding on atomic structure on opposition to nuclear bomb testing
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Linus Pauling won his second Nobel Prize for his work
WB CHECK: Linus Pauling won his second Nobel Prize for his work on DNA structure on chemical bonding on atomic structure on opposition to nuclear bomb testing
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POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces
Covered so far: Ionic bonding in ionic compounds Metallic bonding in metals and alloys Covalent bonding that holds atoms together in molecules A variety of weaker forces exist between molecules and affect the properties of molecular compounds
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Polar covalent bonds: atoms share electrons unequally due to electronegativity (EN) differences More EN atom: stronger pull on e- = slight (-) charge Less EN atom: slight (+) charge
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
We use delta (δ) to denote atoms that acquire partial charges in polar molecules
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Ex. Hydrogen Chloride (HCl) δ+ δ- H Cl EN = 2.1 EN = 3.0
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Hydrogen Chloride (HCl) H Cl EN = 2.1 EN = 3.0
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Polar bonds result in a dipole: Any bond having two poles (charged regions)
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Ex. Water (H2O) δ- EN = 3.5 O δ+ δ+ H H EN = 2.1 EN = 2.1
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Ex. Water (H2O) EN = 3.5 O H H EN = 2.1 EN = 2.1
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
One end of a dipole is slightly negative, the other end slightly positive Dependent on shape of molecule
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POINT > Review polar covalent bonding
Ex. Carbon dioxide (CO2) vs. water (H2O) H O EN = 2.1 EN = 3.5 Dipoles Cancel O C Nonpolar Molecule Polar Molecule EN = 3.5 EN = 2.5 EN = 3.5
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POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces
Forces between molecules (from strongest to weakest) Ion-dipole forces: Ion-dipole forces occur when ionic compounds are dissolved in water The charged ions interact with the dipoles of the water molecules
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Ion-dipole interactions
POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces Ion-dipole interactions
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POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces
2. Hydrogen bonding*: Compounds with O-H, N-H and F-H bonds can form hydrogen bonds The polarity of these bonds and the small size of hydrogen atoms causes strong attractions Hydrogen bonds create surface tension in water They hold molecules, like the two strands of DNA, together * These are not bonds. They are intermolecular forces
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POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces
Hydrogen bonding
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WB CHECK: What type of intermolecular force would occur between H2O and MgCl2? What type of intermolecular force would occur between H2O and NH3?
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Ex. HCl, HBr, H2S POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces
3. Dipole-dipole forces: These are interactions between polar molecules with out O-H, N-H or F-H bonds Ex. HCl, HBr, H2S
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POINT > Describe 4 types of intermolecular forces
4. London dispersion forces (LDF): These are the weakest intermolecular forces LDFs occur when a polar molecule induces a temporary dipole in an otherwise nonpolar molecule
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CHECK: Rank order the intermolecular forces, from strongest to weakest: (LDF = London dispersion force) a) dipole-dipole, H bonding, LDF, ion-dipole b) ion-dipole, dipole-dipole, H bonding, LDF c) LDF, ion-dipole, dipole-dipole, H bonding d) ion-dipole, dipole-dipole, H bonding, LDF e) ion-dipole, H bonding, dipole-dipole, LDFWB
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POINT > Relate intermolecular forces to changes of state
Intermolecular forces govern properties of substances (like boiling point) Interactions that tend to hold molecules together result in higher boiling and melting points
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Bonding and intermolecular forces overview
Strongest Weakest Metallic bonding Covalent bonding Ionic bonding Ion-dipole Hydrogen bonding Dipole-dipole London dispersion intermolecular forces
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WB CHECK: What is the strongest intermolecular force that would be present in CH4? ion-dipole hydrogen bonding dipole-dipole LDF
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WB CHECK: What is the strongest intermolecular force that would be present in Br2? ion-dipole hydrogen bonding dipole-dipole LDF
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WB CHECK: What is the strongest intermolecular force that would be present in H2O? ion-dipole hydrogen bonding dipole-dipole LDF
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WB CHECK: What is the strongest intermolecular force that would be present in HCl? ion-dipole hydrogen bonding dipole-dipole LDF
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WB CHECK: What is the strongest intermolecular force that would be present in a mixture of ethanol (C2H5OH) and water? ion-dipole hydrogen bonding dipole-dipole LDF
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Homework: Read and re-read 6.5 pages F.A. #4-6 page 197
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