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VSEPR Theory. Molecular Structure. Molecular structure – the three-dimensional arrangement of atoms in a molecule. VSEPR Theory. VSEPR Theory (Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory)
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Molecular Structure • Molecular structure – the three-dimensional arrangement of atoms in a molecule
VSEPR Theory • VSEPR Theory (Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory) • A model for describing the shapes of molecules whose main postulate is that the structure around a given atom is determined by minimizing the electron pair repulsion • Therefore, the electrons and elements bonded to the central atom want to be as far apart as possible
VSEPR Steps • Draw the Lewis structure for the molecule • Count the total number of things that are around the central atom to determine the electron pair geometry • Imagine that the lone pairs of electrons are invisible and describe the molecular shape
SORRY… • Yes…you must memorize the main shapes and bond angles
2 Electron Pairs • If there are 2 things attached to the central atom, the shape is linear • 220 • Bond angle = 180°
3 Electron Pairs • If there are 3 electron pairs or bonds the shape will be trigonal planar • 330 • Bond angle = 120°
3 electron pairs • Now imagine that you have 3 electron pairs, but one is just a lone pair (invisible) what would it look like then? • 321
4 electron pairs • If there are 4 electron pairs, the shape will be tetrahedral • 440 • Bond angle = 109.5°
4 electron pairs • What if 1 of the electron pairs is a lone pair (invisible)? What would it look like then? • 431 • Trigonal Pyramidal
4 electron pairs • What if there are 2 lone pairs (invisible)? What would it look like then? • 422 • bent
5 electron pairs • If there are 5 electron pairs the shape will be Trigonal Bipyramidal • 550 • Bond angles = 90º & 120º
5 electron pairs • What if there is 1 lone pair (invisible) • 540 • Seesaw
5 electron pairs • What if there are 2 lone pairs (invisible) • 532 • T-shaped
6 electron pairs • If there are 6 electron pairs the shape will be octahedral • 660 • Bond angle = 90°
6 electron pairs • What if there is 1 lone pair (invisible)? • 651 • Square pyramidal
6 electron pairs • What if there are 2 lone pairs (invisible) • 642 • Square planar
Hybridization 2s 2p X C X X X • Look at the orbital notation for the carbon atom on the right. • There appear to be only two electrons available for bonding with other atoms. • However, one carbon will bond equally with four hydrogens as in methane, CH4.
Hybridization of the carbon atom sp3 hybrid orbitals H X 0 H X 0 C X 0 H X 0 H • The orbitals combine an s orbital and three p orbitals to form four equal sp3 hybrid orbitals. • Each hybrid orbital can bond with a hydrogen atom.
Most molecular bonding involves hybrid orbitals. Five equal bonds are formed by a s, 3p and a d orbital-5 sp3d hybrids Six equal bonds are formed by a s, 3p and 2 d orbitals-6 sp3d2 hybrids • Two equal bonds are formed by a s and a p orbital-2 sp hybrids • Three equal bonds are formed by a s and 2 p orbitals-3 sp2 hybrids • Four equal bonds are formed by a s and 3 p orbitals-4 sp3 hybrids
H e- e- e- e- H H C e- e- e- e- H Without VSEPR you want to draw Methane, CH4 like this.
However, this isn’t VSEPR. H e- e- e- e- e- e- H H H H H C e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- H • This looks good in 2 dimensions, all angles are 90° but the molecule is 3D. • The electron pairs aren’t as far apart as possible. • From the side we see that some are 180 °. This doesn’t fit VSEPR.
The shape that allows the maximum distribution of electron pairs in 3D is the tetrahedron. All bond angles are 109.5°.
Without VSEPR, this is the way that you would draw the water molecule. All angles are equal and balanced. e- e- e- e- O H H e- e- e- e-
H H e- e- e- e- O e- e- e- e- Due to the unequal repulsion of the electrons the shape looks more like this. Why?
The angles aren’t all 109.5°, the angle between the unshared pairs is more than 109.5° and between the shared pairs is only 104.5°. H H e- e- e- e- O e- e- e- e- Shared pairs push apart the least. Unshared pairs push apart the most.
This figure shows the position of the hydrogen atoms and the unshared pairs in the water molecule. A modified tetrahedral called “water bent”.
VSEPR Basic Shapes • Linear shapes occur with 1 or 2 shared pairs and sp hybrids. • Trigonal planar shapes occur with sp2 hybrids. • Tetrahedral shapes are based on sp3 hybrids. • Trigonal bipyrimidals are based on sp3d hybrids. • Octahedrals are based on sp3d2 hybrids. • All shapes are based upon these 5 shapes.
Organic molecules • Often organic molecules (generally those compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, and sometimes oxygen) form multiple bonds. These multiple bonds involve more than one pair of e-. For V.S.E.P.R., count all multiple bonds as a single pair of e-. • When an organic compound has multiple bonds it is called unsaturated. This means that it doesn’t have the max. number of H for the number of carbons.
and bonds • All bonds contain a bond that occurs directly between the nuclei involved. This bond is a bond. • Multiple bonds also overlap above and out to the side of bonds. Bonds that occur outside of a line drawn between the nuclei are called bonds. • Double bonds have 1 and 1 . Triple bonds have 1 and 2 bonds.
Other bonds • Conjugated systems occur when multiple p orbitals overlap, as in benzene C6H6. They are very stable. • Coordinate covalent bonds are bonds where both e- in the shared pair come from one atom.
Polar bond vs. Polar molecule • Every year students have trouble with the difference between these two terms. • Polar bonds refer to the difference in electronegativities between two atoms. Between 0.3 and about 1.7-polar bond. • Polar molecules refer to the shape of a molecule. If the partial charges aren’t evenly distributed, it’s a polar molecule.
Methane. H C H H H δ+ δ+ δ+
Molecular Orbitals • When two atomic orbitals from different atoms interact, two new molecular orbitals are formed. • Bonding molecular orbital- additive orbital, high electron density between nuclei • Antibonding molecular orbital- subtractive orbital, low electron density between nuclei (indicated by an *) • Antibonding orbitals are higher energy than bonding orbitals and therefore less stable. • Bond order = ½ (e-bonding-e-antibonding)
The Electron Probability Distribution in the Bonding Molecular Orbital of the HF Molecule
THE END V.S.E.P.R., let it work for you! And that's the truth!