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Warm Up

Warm Up. What does VSEPR stand for? List the five different shapes of molecules. Predict the shape of the following: H 2 S O 2 CCl 4. Polarity and Properties of Bonds. Unit Four, Day Five Kimrey 6 October 2012. Remember Polarity??. What do you remember?. Polarity.

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Warm Up

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  1. Warm Up • What does VSEPR stand for? • List the five different shapes of molecules. • Predict the shape of the following: • H2S • O2 • CCl4

  2. Polarity and Properties of Bonds Unit Four, Day Five Kimrey 6 October 2012

  3. Remember Polarity?? • What do you remember?

  4. Polarity • Polarity is defined as the unequal distribution of electrons. • It can be used in describing of bonds, as we have discussed. • It can also be used to describe an entire molecule. But what does that actually mean? • Polar molecules have a slightly positive end and a slightly negative end.

  5. How do you know if a molecule is polar? • Bent, and trigonalpyramidal molecules are ALWAYS polar. • Tetrahedral, trigonal planar, and linearcan also be polar IF and ONLY IF the outer elements are different. • Ex. CH2F2 • So, if a compound is tetrahedral, trigonal planar, or linear, and the outer elements are all the same, then the compound is non-polar

  6. Examples • Determine if the following molecules are polar or non-polar. To do this, draw the Dot Diagram and determine the shape! • CH4 • NH3 • H2O • CSeF2 • CO2

  7. More Practice! • Determine if the molecule is polar or non-polar: • NH3 • HCl • O2 • CHF3 • OF2

  8. Strength of Bonds • Non-polar bonds are the weakest • Then come polar • And the strongest bonds are ionic • Bond strength is measured by boiling points and melting points • the stronger the bond, the higher the melting point and boiling point.

  9. Properties of Ionic Compounds • Ionic bonds are the strongest!! • Composed of positive and negative ions • Form between a metal and a non-metal or a metal and a polyatomic ion • Solids at room temperature • When bonded, they are arranged very neatly – become crystals • High melting points and boiling points • Brittle • Conduct electricity when dissolved in water

  10. Properties of Covalent Compounds • Smallest unit is a molecule • May be solid, liquid, or gas • Low melting and boiling points • Covalent solids are softer than ionic solids • Do not conduct electricity

  11. Warm-up • Predict the shape and polarity of the following covalent molecules • OF2 • H2 • CH4 • PCl3

  12. Comparing within Covalent Polar Covalent Non-Polar Covalent Do not dissolve in water Very weak bonds Low melting points and low boiling points Exist as gases at room temperature Ex: O2, H2 • Dissolve in water • Stronger bonds (but not as strong as ionic) • Higher melting and boiling points • Exist as solids or liquids at room temperature • Ex: H2O, sugar

  13. Properties of Metallic Compounds • Shiny • Malleable • Ductile • Crystalline • Solid at room temperature (except for Hg) • Melting points vary widely • Good conductors of heat and electricity • Do not dissolve in water

  14. Na2S • CBr4 • SO3 • CaI2 • PCl3 • N2

  15. Warm-up • Predict the shape and polarity of the following covalent molecules • OF2 • H2 • CH4 • PCl3

  16. Types of Intermolecular Forces • Hydrogen bonding • Dipole-Dipole • London Dispersion Forces

  17. Hydrogen Bonding • The strongest of the intermolecular forces. • Between hydrogen and oxygen, hydrogen and fluorine, or hydrogen and nitrogen atoms from different molecules • It’s an electrostatic attraction, not a true chemical bond • Very important in water!

  18. Dipole-Dipole • Attractive forces between the positive end of one polar molecule and the negative end of another polar molecule

  19. London Dispersion • Also called induced dipole • Between non-polar molecules • Very very weak

  20. So, intermolecular forces summary • Hydrogen bonds are the strongest • Then comes dipole-dipole interactions • And the weakest intermolecular forces are London Dispersion forces

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