1 / 27

II. Molecular Geometry

Ch. 9 – Molecular Structure. II. Molecular Geometry. A. VSEPR Theory. V alence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory Electron pairs orient themselves in order to minimize repulsive forces. Lone pairs repel more strongly than bonding pairs!!!. A. VSEPR Theory. Types of e - Pairs

deandonald
Download Presentation

II. Molecular Geometry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch. 9 – Molecular Structure II. Molecular Geometry

  2. A. VSEPR Theory • Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory • Electron pairs orient themselves in order to minimize repulsive forces.

  3. Lone pairs repel more strongly than bonding pairs!!! A. VSEPR Theory • Types of e- Pairs • Bonding pairs - form bonds • Lone pairs - nonbonding e-

  4. Bond Angle A. VSEPR Theory • Lone pairs reduce the bond angle between atoms.

  5. Know the common shapes & their bond angles! B. Determining Molecular Shape • Draw the Lewis Diagram. • Tally up e- pairs on central atom. • double/triple bonds = ONE pair • Shape is determined by the # of bonding pairs and lone pairs.

  6. BeH2 C. Common Molecular Shapes 2 total 2 bond 0 lone LINEAR 180°

  7. BF3 C. Common Molecular Shapes 3 total 3 bond 0 lone TRIGONAL PLANAR 120°

  8. SO2 C. Common Molecular Shapes 3 total 2 bond 1 lone BENT 104.5°

  9. CH4 C. Common Molecular Shapes 4 total 4 bond 0 lone TETRAHEDRAL 109.5°

  10. NH3 C. Common Molecular Shapes 4 total 3 bond 1 lone TRIGONAL PYRAMIDAL 107°

  11. H2O C. Common Molecular Shapes 4 total 2 bond 2 lone BENT 104.5°

  12. PCl5 C. Common Molecular Shapes 5 total 5 bond 0 lone TRIGONAL BIPYRAMIDAL 120°/90°

  13. SF6 C. Common Molecular Shapes 6 total 6 bond 0 lone OCTAHEDRAL 90°

  14. F P F F D. Examples • PF3 4 total 3 bond 1 lone TRIGONAL PYRAMIDAL 107°

  15. OCO D. Examples • CO2 2 total 2 bond 0 lone LINEAR 180°

  16. C. Bond Polarity • Electronegativity Trend • Increases up and to the right.

  17. + - H Cl A. Dipole Moment • Direction of the polar bond in a molecule. • Arrow points toward the more e-neg atom.

  18. B. Determining Molecular Polarity • Depends on: • dipole moments • molecular shape

  19. F BF3 B F F B. Determining Molecular Polarity • Nonpolar Molecules • Dipole moments are symmetrical and cancel out.

  20. O net dipole moment H2O H H B. Determining Molecular Polarity • Polar Molecules • Dipole moments are asymmetrical and don’t cancel .

  21. H net dipole moment CHCl3 Cl Cl Cl B. Determining Molecular Polarity • Therefore, polar molecules have... • asymmetrical shape (lone pairs) or • asymmetrical atoms

  22. C. Bond Polarity • Most bonds are a blend of ionic and covalent characteristics. • Difference in electronegativity determines bond type.

  23. EN Difference • 0.0 - 0.4 Nonpolar • 0.4 - 1.0 Moderately Polar Covalent • 1.0 - 2.0 Very Polar Covalent • > 2.0 Ionic

  24. C. Bond Polarity Examples: • Cl2 • HCl • NaCl 3.0-3.0=0.0 Nonpolar 3.0-2.1=0.9 Moderately Polar Covalent 3.0-0.9=2.1 Ionic

  25. C. Bond Polarity • Electronegativity • Attraction an atom has for a shared pair of electrons. • higher e-neg atom  - • lower e-neg atom + ____

  26. C. Bond Polarity • Nonpolar Covalent Bond • e- are shared equally • symmetrical e- density • usually identical atoms

  27. - + C. Bond Polarity • Polar Covalent Bond • e- are shared unequally • asymmetrical e- density • results in partial charges (dipole)

More Related