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Week 4, Section Bonds: Tug of war for electrons

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Presentation on theme: "Week 4, Section Bonds: Tug of war for electrons"— Presentation transcript:

1 Week 4, Section Bonds: Tug of war for electrons
9/30/05

2 H2 H-H Do both atoms contribute equally to the bond?

3 HCl Do both atoms contribute equally to the bond?
Are the electrons in the bond shared equally by both atoms? Have 2 volunteers grab a chain and pull in opposite directions. Ask if the students are representing the H-H bond or the H-Cl bond. If the HCl bond, which student would represent Cl in the bond?

4 Polarity Polarity is an unequal sharing of electrons
What causes polarity in HCl?

5 Electronegativity the ability of an atom in a covalent bond to attract shared electrons to itself

6 Is the molecule polar? CO2 NH3 SF4
In order to determine polarity, you must visualize the tug-of-war going on in the molecule for the electrons. Have students draw Lewis structure, name the molecular geometry, and demonstrate with ropes the polarity of a molecule. Introduce the arrow notation to denote dipoles.

7 For a molecule to be polar it must:
1. have at least 1 polar bond or 1 lone pair 2. and polar bonds or lone pairs must be arranged in space so that the dipoles do not cancel out

8 Are they polar? C2H2 XeF2 BF3 SF6 CHCl3 XeF4 ICl3 BrF5 Report back:
#Valence electrons Lewis structure Molecular structure Dipole (if any)

9 Polarity of molecules Electron density maps (color) Plus-arrows CHCl3
BrF5 SCN- SCN- (do dipoles cancel out) H20 SO2 opposite dipole BrF5 dipole even in large molecule! SO2 or H2O?


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