Top Banner
Orbitales “s”
34

Orbitales “ s”

Feb 20, 2016

Download

Documents

koko

Orbitales “ s”. Orbitales “ p”. 3 O.A. p ( p x p y p z ) de même énergie. Orbitales “ d”. Spin e -. Orbitales électroniques. Tableau périodique des éléments. Valence. Rayon atomique. Rayon atomique. Énergie d’ionisation. Énergie d’ionisation. Énergie d’ionisation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Orbitales  “ s”

Orbitales “s”

Page 2: Orbitales  “ s”

3 O.A. p (px py pz) de même énergie

Orbitales “p”

Page 3: Orbitales  “ s”

Orbitales “d”

Page 4: Orbitales  “ s”

Spin e-

Page 6: Orbitales  “ s”

Tableau périodique des éléments

Page 7: Orbitales  “ s”

Valence

Page 8: Orbitales  “ s”

Rayon atomique

Page 9: Orbitales  “ s”

Rayon atomique

Page 10: Orbitales  “ s”

Énergie d’ionisation

Page 11: Orbitales  “ s”

Énergie d’ionisation

Page 12: Orbitales  “ s”
Page 13: Orbitales  “ s”

Énergie d’ionisation

Page 14: Orbitales  “ s”

Énergie d’ionisation

Al : 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p1

Na : 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s1

Mg : 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2

Page 15: Orbitales  “ s”

Taille ions

Page 16: Orbitales  “ s”
Page 17: Orbitales  “ s”

Affinité électronique

Page 18: Orbitales  “ s”

Electronégativité

Page 19: Orbitales  “ s”

Electronegativité

Page 20: Orbitales  “ s”
Page 21: Orbitales  “ s”

Ions• Un atome possède normalement le

même nombre d’électrons que de protons. Autant de charges + que de charges -. La charge net de l’atome est nulle.

• Lorsqu’un atome perd ou gagne un ou plusieurs électrons, il devient ionisé. Avec un déficit d’électrons, l’atome a une charge nette positive, avec un excédent d’électrons, il a une charge nette negative.

Page 22: Orbitales  “ s”

Foreces Inter Atomiques• Attraction• Répulsion• Vander waals• Dipolaires

Page 23: Orbitales  “ s”

Attractive / Repulsive Forces

Page 24: Orbitales  “ s”

Energy and Bond Formation

http://server.chem.ufl.edu/~chm2040/Notes/Chapter_10/properties.html#e_energies_and_affinities

Page 25: Orbitales  “ s”

Types of Chemical Bonds• Covalent bonds

– Shared electron, dipole possible• Ionic bonds

– Shared electron, but strong dipole• Metallic bonds

– Sea of electrons shared by all atoms• Semiconductors

– Valence electron can move into band gap

Page 26: Orbitales  “ s”

Liaison Ionique

Page 28: Orbitales  “ s”

Ionic Bond• Ionic bonding can be thought of as an

‘extreme dipole moment’• Atom A (if a cation) loses much of the

electron density in a valence shell• Atom B (if a anion) gains much of the electron

density in a valence shell• Together, they form a chemical bond, with a

strong dipole moment (cation => anion)• Very common in ceramics, salts and minerals

Page 29: Orbitales  “ s”

Na (metal) unstable

Cl (nonmetal) unstable

electron

+ - Coulombic Attraction

Na (cation) stable

Cl (anion) stable

• Occurs between + and - ions.• Requires electron transfer.• Large difference in electronegativity required• Example: NaCl

Ionic Bonding

Page 30: Orbitales  “ s”

Covalent Bond• Shared electrons• One electron from an orbital in atom A• One electron from an orbital in atom B• They become ‘spin paired’

– Lewis structure model for octet rule– VSERP – how shells form and repel

• Chemistry is ‘physics in motion’

Page 31: Orbitales  “ s”

Ionic Bond and Electronegativity

• Consideration of electronegativity can demonstrate that ionic bonds are nothing more than an extreme case of a polar covalent bond. In fact…

• If the electronegativity difference between two atoms is greater than 2.0, then any bond between these two atoms would be (defined as) ionic.

Page 32: Orbitales  “ s”

Polar Covalent Bonds in H2O

O

H H + +

-

Electronegativity difference between oxygen and hydrogen

Page 33: Orbitales  “ s”

Molecular Polarity

If a molecule contains polar bonds, and if those polar bonds are located such that the + charges are at one end of the molecule and the - charges are at the other end, then the molecule is a polar molecule. The measure of molecular polarity is a quantity called the dipole moment (D).

Page 34: Orbitales  “ s”

le cerveau gauche : est utilisé pour la logique, les sciences, le langage, les maths ou encore la sécurité.Le cerveau droit : est quand à lui le lieu de la créativité, la philosophie, l’appréciation et la prise de risque.

Si vous la voyez dans le sens horaire, vous utilisez majoritairement votre cerveau droit, sinon, c’est le gauche. Avec un peu de concentration, il est possible de changer le sens.