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PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state university
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PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

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Page 1: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I

CHEM 1211

CHAPTER 9

DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMANAssistant professor of chemistryDepartment of natural sciences

Clayton state university

Page 2: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

CHAPTER 9

CHEMICAL BONDING

Page 3: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- The attractive force that holds atoms together

- The result of interactions between electrons in the combining atoms

Two types of chemical bonds - Covalent and Ionic (electrovalent) bonds

CHEMICAL BOND

Page 4: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Covalent Bond

- Formed through the sharing of one or more pairs of electrons between two atoms

- Always involve two nonmetals

- Electron sharing

CHEMICAL BOND

Page 5: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Ionic Bond

- Formed by attraction between two oppositely charged ions

- Formed as a result of the transfer of electron(s) from atom(s) to another atom(s)

- Often formed between metal and nonmetal ions through electrostatic attraction

- Electron transfer

CHEMICAL BOND

Page 6: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

CHEMICAL BOND

Two concepts

- Valence Electrons

- Octet Rule

Page 7: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

VALENCE ELECTRONS

- Not all electrons in a given atom participate in bonding

- Only valence electrons are available for bonding (electrons in the outer most shell)

- For representative and noble-gas elements these electrons are always found in the s or p subshells

Page 8: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

VALENCE ELECTRONS

- Using electron configuration to determine the number of valence electrons

C: 1s22s22p2

O: 1s22s22p4

Na: 1s22s22p63s1

- Using electron-dot structure (Lewis symbol) to designatethe number of valence electrons

(place first 4 dots separately on four sides and pair up as needed)

∙C∙ :O∙ Na∙.

.

..

.

Page 9: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

VALENCE ELECTRONS

Three important facts about valence electrons

- Representative elements in the same group of the periodic table have the same number of valence electrons

- The number of valence electrons for representative elements is the same as the group number (with A) in the periodic table

- The maximum number of valence electrons for any given element is eight

Page 10: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

OCTET RULE

- Electrons arranged with 8 valence electrons are more stable than all others

- The valence electron configuration of the noble gases are considered the most stable

(all have 8 valence electrons; helium has 2)

- All noble gases have the outermost s and p subshells completely filled

Page 11: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

OCTET RULE

- The noble gases are the most unreactive of all elements

- Atoms of many elements tend to acquire the 8 valence electron configuration through chemical reactions

- Atoms of elements tend to gain, lose, or share electrons to produce a noble-gas electron configuration

- This results in the formation of compounds

- This tendency is known as the OCTET RULE

Page 12: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

IONIC BOND

- Electron transfer

- Metals donate electrons to form positive ions

- Nonmetals accept electrons to form negative ions

- The electrons lost by the metal are the same ones gained by the nonmetal

Page 13: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- The positive and negative ions attract one another to form ionic compounds

- Ions combine in ratios to obtain charge neutrality (net charge = 0)

- The symbol for positive ions is always written first

IONIC BOND

Page 14: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Lewis Structures- Lewis structures involve compounds

- Lewis symbols involve individual elements

Na∙ + ∙Cl: [Na]+ [:Cl:]- NaCl

CaCl2

..

.. ..

..

∙Ca∙ +..

..∙Cl:

∙Cl:..

..[Ca]2+

[:Cl:]-

[:Cl:]-

..

..

..

..

IONIC BOND

Page 15: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Energetics

Removing an electron from Na(g) to form Na+(g)Na(g) → Na+(g) + e- E = +496 kJ/mol

Adding an electron to Cl(g) to form Cl-(g) Cl(g) + e- → Cl-(g) E = -349 kJ/mol

- Attraction between the unlike charges draws ions togethercausing energy to be released

Heat of formation of ionic substances is quite exothermicNa(s) + 1/2Cl2(g) → NaCl(s) Hf

o = -410.9 kJ

IONIC BOND

Page 16: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Energetics

- Ionic compounds do not contain discrete molecules but ordered arrays of positive and negative ions

(result of energy released)

NaCl- Formula unit that indicates combining ratio

- A given sodium ion has six immediate chloride ion neighbors

- A given chloride ion has six immediate sodium ion neighbors

IONIC BOND

Page 17: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Lattice Energy

- The energy required to completely separate one mole of a solid ionic compound into its gaseous ions

- Increases with increasing charge on the ions and decreasing distance between the radii of the ions (from electrostatic

potential energy, Eel)

NaCl(s) → Na+(g) + Cl-(g) Hlattice = +788 kJ/mol

IONIC BOND

Page 18: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Lattice Energy

- Highly endothermic indicating ions are strongly attracted to one another

- Reason why ionic compounds are hard, brittle, and have high melting points

Melting point of NaCl is 801 oC

IONIC BOND

Page 19: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Generally, transition metals do not form ions that have the noble-gas configuration

- Transition metals first lose valence-shell s electrons and then as many d electrons as required to form ions

- Transition metals can form different cations

Fe: Fe2+ and Fe3+

Sn: Sn2+ and Sn4+

Pb: Pb2+ and Pb4+

TRANSITION METAL IONS

Page 20: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

COVALENT BONDING

- Involve electron sharing

- Usually occurs between two nonmetals

- The basic structural unit in covalent bonding is a molecule

- Forms molecular compounds

Page 21: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

H H∙ ∙ :H H

Two hydrogen atoms H + H

Hydrogen molecule H H

1s electrons Shared electron pair

COVALENT BONDING

Page 22: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Two neclei attract the same shared electrons to form a covalent bond

- Orbitals containing the valence electrons overlap to create a common orbital

- The electrons move throughout the common orbital

- The electrons are shared by both nuclei

COVALENT BONDING

Page 23: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- The valence electrons help each atom achieve a noble-gas configuration

H∙ ∙H H : H H H

:F∙ :F : F: :F F:

H : F: F:H

H2

∙F:

∙F:

..

.. ..

..F2

HF H∙..

..

.. ..

.. ..

..

..

..

....

..

..

..

bonding electrons nonbonding

electrons

LEWIS STRUCTURES

Page 24: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Bonding Electrons - The pairs of valence electrons involved in the

covalent bond formation

Nonbonding Electrons (Lone Pairs of Electrons)- The pairs of valence electrons not involved in

electron sharing

LEWIS STRUCTURES

Page 25: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

H2O

H ∙

H ∙

O : O

H

H : OR O

H

H

- Oxygen (O) has six valence electrons - Gains two more through electron sharing with H

- Achieves a noble-gas configuration

..

..:

..

.. .. :

LEWIS STRUCTURES

Page 26: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

NH3

H ∙

H ∙

N N

H

H : OR N

H

HH ∙

H H

: : :.

..

..

..

LEWIS STRUCTURES

- Nitrogen (N) has five valence electrons - Gains three more through electron sharing with H

- Achieves a noble-gas configuration

Page 27: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

CH4

∙ C ∙ C

H

H : OR C

H

H

H H

H ∙

: H H.

.

..

..H ∙

H ∙

H ∙

LEWIS STRUCTURES

- Carbon (C) has four valence electrons - Gains four more through electron sharing with H

- Achieves a noble-gas configuration

Page 28: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

SINGLE COVALENT BOND

- Two atoms share one pair of valence electrons

- Represented by one line

- Bond order is one

Bond Order- Number of electron pairs that are shared between two atoms

Bond Length- The minimum energy distance between the nuclei

of two bonded atoms in a molecule

Page 29: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

DOUBLE COVALENT BOND

- Two atoms share two pairs of valence electrons

- Represented by two lines

- Approximately twice as strong as a single covalent bond between the same two atoms

- Bond order is two

Page 30: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

DOUBLE COVALENT BOND

CO2

- C has four valence electrons and needs four more

- Each O atom has six valence electrons and needs two more

:O::C::O: or O C O

- Possible for elements that need two electrons to complete their octet

.. ..

Page 31: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

TRIPLE COVALENT BOND

- Two atoms share three pairs of valence electrons

- Represented by three lines

- Approximately thrice as strong as a single covalent bond between the same two atoms

- Bond order is three

- Bond length decreases with increasing bond order

Page 32: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

TRIPLE COVALENT BOND

N2

- Nitrogen has five valence electrons and needs three more tocomplete its octet

- Each nitrogen must share three of its electrons with the other

:N:::N: or :N N:

- Possible for elements that need three or more electrons to complete their octet

Page 33: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

COORDINATE COVALENT BOND

- Both electrons come from only one of the two bonding atoms

- Oxygen often forms coordinate covalent bonds

: +X Y :X Y

filled orbital vacant orbital shared electron pair

H : O : Cl :

coordinate covalent bond

Chlorous acid (HClO2)Hypochlorous acid (HOCl)

.. H : O : Cl : O : ..

..

.. .. ..

.. ..

.. ..

Page 34: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

ELECTRONEGATIVITY

- The ability of an atom to attract to itself the electrons in a chemical bond

- Electronegativity depends on atom size

nuclear charge number of inner shell electrons

- Increases from left to right across periods on the periodic table

Page 35: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Increases from bottom to top within groups on the periodic table

- Flourine is the most electronegative of all the elements

- Nonmetals are more electronegative than metals

- Indicative of the fact that nonmetals gain electrons and metals lose electrons

ELECTRONEGATIVITY

Page 36: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

LEWIS STRUCTURES

- Calculate the total number of valence electrons in the molecule (use group numbers in the periodic table)

HClO2

H (group IA) has 1 valence electronCl (group VIIA) has 7 valence electronsO (group VIA) has 6 valence electrons

Total electron count = 1 + 7 + 2(6) = 20

Page 37: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Determine the central atom

The central atom - mostly appears only once (SO3, SO2, CH4)

- is usually any additional element other than H and O (HNO3, H2SO4)

- is C in almost all carbon-containing compounds- is neither H nor F (can make only one covalent bond)

- for O and H containing compounds O is bonded to the central atom and H to O

HClO2 (Cl is the central atom)

LEWIS STRUCTURES

Page 38: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Write the atoms in the order in which they are bonded together

- Place a pair of electrons between each pair of atoms

H : O : Cl : O

HClO2

LEWIS STRUCTURES

Page 39: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Add nonbonding electron pairs to all atoms except the central atom- Each atom should have eight electrons

- H needs only 2 electrons

HClO2

H : O : Cl : O :

16 out of the 20 electrons have been used up

..

.. ..

..

LEWIS STRUCTURES

Page 40: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HClO2

H : O : Cl : O :

20 out of the 20 electrons have been used up

..

.. ..

..

LEWIS STRUCTURES

- Place any remaining electrons on the central atom of the structure

.. ..

Page 41: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HClO2

H : O : Cl : O : ..

.. ..

..

LEWIS STRUCTURES

.. ..

- This step is not needed in this case since Cl has completed its octet

- If the central atom has less than eight move nonbonding electron pairs to form double or triple bonds

Page 42: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HClO2

H : O : Cl : O : ..

.. ..

..

LEWIS STRUCTURES

.. ..

- Count the total number of electrons in the Lewis structure(must equal the initial number)

20 electrons equal to the intial 20

Page 43: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN

H (group IA) has 1 valence electronC (group IVA) has 4 valence electronsN (group VA) has 5 valence electrons

Total electron count = 1 + 4 + 5 = 10

LEWIS STRUCTURES

- Calculate the total number of valence electrons in the molecule (use group numbers in the periodic table)

Page 44: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN (C is the cental atom)

LEWIS STRUCTURES - Determine the central atom

The central atom

- mostly appears only once (SO3, SO2, CH4)- is usually any additional element other than H and O

(HNO3, H2SO4)- is C in almost all carbon-containing compounds

- is neither H nor F (can make only one covalent bond)- for O and H containing compounds

O is bonded to the central atom and H to O

Page 45: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN

H : C : N

LEWIS STRUCTURES

- Write the atoms in the order in which they are bonded together

- Place a pair of electrons between each pair of atoms

Page 46: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN

H : C : N :

LEWIS STRUCTURES

.. ..

10 out of the 10 electrons have been used up

- Add nonbonding electron pairs to all atoms except the central atom- Each atom should have eght electrons

- H needs only 2 electrons

Page 47: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN

H : C : N :

LEWIS STRUCTURES

.. ..

10 out of the 10 electrons have been used up- Nothing left to be placed on the central atom

- Place any remaining electrons on the central atom of the structure

Page 48: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN

H : C : N :

LEWIS STRUCTURES

.. ..

H : C ::: N :

- If the central atom has less than eight move nonbonding electron pairs to form double or triple bonds

Page 49: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

HCN

H : C : N :

LEWIS STRUCTURES

.. ..

H : C ::: N :

- Count the total number of electrons in the Lewis structure(must equal the initial number)

10 electrons equal to the initial 10

Page 50: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

POLYATOMIC IONS

The total number of electrons for negative charges

- increase the number of electrons by the magnitude of the charge

SO42-

S (group VIA) has 6 valence electronsO (group VIA) has 6 valence electrons

Charge of -2

Total number of electrons = 6 + 4(6) + 2 = 32

Page 51: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

NH4+

N (group VA) has 5 valence electronsH (group IA) has 1 valence electron

Charge of +1

Total number of electrons = 5 + 4(1) - 1 = 8

The total number of electrons for positive charges

- decrease the number of electrons by the magnitude of the charge

POLYATOMIC IONS

Page 52: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Ionic compound containing polyatomic ion

- The cation and anion are treated separately

Na2SO4

[Na]+

[Na]+S

:O:

:O:

O::O

2- ..

.. ..

.. ..

..

POLYATOMIC IONS

Page 53: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

BOND POLARITY

Nonpolar Covalent Bond

- Two atoms involved in electron sharing have equal or similar electronegativity

- Typically less than 0.4

- Equal sharing of electrons

F2, H2, O2

Page 54: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

BOND POLARITY

Polar Covalent Bond

- There exists unequal sharing of electrons

- One atom is more electronegative than the other

- One atom attracts electrons more strongly than the other

- Electronegativity difference is between 0.4 and 1.5

HCl, CO

Page 55: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

BOND POLARITY

- Increasing bond polarity renders a bond more ionic

- Ionic bonds have electronegativity difference greater than 2.0

- Most bonds are a mixture of pure ionic and pure covalent

- No natural boundary between ionic and covalent bonding

For electronegativity difference between 1.5 and 2.0 - ionic bond if metal and a nonmetal are involved

- polar covalent bond if two nonmetals are involved

Page 56: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

- Polar covalent bonds create partial positive and negative charges on the atoms involved

- Delta (δ) is used to designate these partial charges δ+ for less electronegative atom δ- for more electronegative atom

H Cl:

BOND POLARITY

..

..δ+ δ-

Page 57: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

H Cl:

- An arrow with a cross can also be used

- The arrowhead is near the more electronegative end of the bond

BOND POLARITY

..

..

Page 58: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

DIPOLE MOMENTS

- A dipole establishes whenever two electrical charges of equal magnitude but opposite sign are separated by a distance

- The quantitative measure of the magnitude of the dipole is known as the dipole moment

µ = Qr

µ = dipole moment Q = electrical charge (two equal and opposite charges Q+ and Q-)

r = distance between the centers of Q+ and Q- Units: debyes (D)

1 D = 3.34 x 10-30 coulomb-meters (C-m)

Page 59: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

FORMAL CHARGE

- Used to predict stability and connectivity

To Calculate the Formal Charge- All nonbonding (unshared electrons) are assigned to the atom

on which they are found- Half of the number of bonding electrons are assigned to each

atom in the bond

Formal Charge = Number of electronsassigned to the atom

Number of valenceelectrons in the

isolated atom-

- Sum of formal charges equals the overall charge- Sum of formal charges in neutral atoms equals zero

Page 60: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

FORMAL CHARGE

Formal Charge = Number of electronsassigned to the atom

Number of valenceelectrons in the

isolated atom-

[:C N:]-

Six electrons in the triple bondC: 2 nonbonding electrons + 3 bonding electrons = 5

Number of valence electrons = 4N: 2 nonbonding electrons + 3 bonding electrons = 5

Number of valence electrons = 5

Formal Charge of C = 4 - 5 = -1Formal Charge of N = 5 - 5 = 0

[:C N:]-

Page 61: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

RESONANCE STRUCTURESOzone (O3)

SO3

O

O O OO

O

:

:: :

::

:::

: :

:

S S S

O O

OO

OO OO

O

: :

: ::: : :

::

::

::: ::::

: ::

::

Page 62: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

EXCEPTIONS TO THE OCTET RULE

Odd Number of Electrons

(NO, ClO2, NO2)

N O N O

: ::.

: :

: .and

- Called radicals and are very reactive

For exampleThe immune system uses NO to fight bacteria

Page 63: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

Less Than an Octet of Valence Electrons(Electron Defficient)

- Usually in compounds of boron, beryllium, and aluminum

- BF3 (only six valence electrons around boron)- BeH2

- BeF2

- BH3

- AlH3

EXCEPTIONS TO THE OCTET RULE

Page 64: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

More Than an Octet of Valence Electrons(Expanded)

- Occurs in elements of period 3 and beyond

- No d orbitals in periods 1 and 2 to hold extra electrons

- PCl5 (10 valence electrons around phosphorus)

- SF6 (12 valence electrons around sulfur)- XeF4

EXCEPTIONS TO THE OCTET RULE

Page 65: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

STRENGTH OF COVALENT BONDS

- Determined by the energy required to break the bonds

- Bond enthalpy is the enthalpy change for breaking the bond in one mole of a gaseous substance

- D(Cl — Cl) denotes bond enthalpy in Cl2

- Bond enthalpies are always positive (energy is consumed)

- To decompose CH4 into C and 4H, H = 1660 kJ There are 4 equivalent C — H bonds

Average C — H bond enthalpy = D(C — H) = (1660/4) kJ/mol = 415 kJ/mol

Page 66: PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY I CHEM 1211 CHAPTER 9 DR. AUGUSTINE OFORI AGYEMAN Assistant professor of chemistry Department of natural sciences Clayton state.

BOND ENTHALPIES

- Bond breaking is an endothermic process

- Bond formation is an exothermic process

formedbondsofenthalpiesbondbrokenbondsofenthalpiesbondΔH rxn

- Bond enthalpy increases with increasing number of bonds

- Bond length decreases with increasing number of bonds