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6.4 VSEPR (Molecular Shapes)
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6.4 VSEPR (Molecular Shapes)

Feb 24, 2016

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6.4 VSEPR (Molecular Shapes). V Valence S Shell E Electron P Pair R Repulsion. I hate you!. Stay away from me!. e -. e -. VSEPR: theory that predicts some molecular shapes based on idea that pairs of valence electrons surrounding an atom repel each other. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

6.4 VSEPR (Molecular Shapes)

Page 2: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

V ValenceS ShellE ElectronP PairR Repulsion

e- e-

I hate you!Stay away from me!

VSEPR: theory that predicts some molecular shapes based on idea that pairs of valence electrons surrounding an atom repel each other

Page 3: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)
Page 4: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Common shapes you should know

Tetrahedral

pyramid with 4 faces

Page 5: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Trigonal pyramidal

squished pyramid

Page 6: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Trigonal Planar

hood ornament of Mercedes

peace sign missing a limb

Page 7: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Bent

Page 8: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Linear

Page 9: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

How do we figure out the shape of a molecule?

Page 10: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Step 1: Draw the Lewis structure for the molecule.

example: NH3

Page 11: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Step 2: Count the number of "things" on the atom you're interested in (the center atom).

Count atoms and lone pairs, NOT BONDS!

example: NH3

NH

H

H

Page 12: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Step 3: Count the number of lone pairs that are on the atom you're interested in.

Lone pairs on other atoms aren't important;only count what is directly stuck to the atom you're interested in.

example: NH3

NH

H

H

Page 13: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Practice

1. CH4

Page 14: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

2. CO2

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3. carbon tetrabromide

4. phosphorus trichloride

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5. boron trichloride

6. sulfur difluoride

Page 17: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

How does shape affect polarity?

Page 18: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Practice: are the following molecules polar or nonpolar?

1. CF4

2. SF2

Page 19: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

3. NF3

4. BeCl2

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Drag the figure showing the shape for this molecule into the box below.

CO2

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Drag the figure showing the shape for this molecule into the box below.

AsF5

Page 22: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Drag the figure showing the shape for this molecule into the box below.

SO3

Page 23: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Drag the figure showing the shape for this molecule into the box below.

NH4+

Page 24: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)

Drag the figure showing the shape for this molecule into the box below.

SCl6

Page 25: 6.4 VSEPR  (Molecular Shapes)