Chemistry 1411 Exam 4 Lessons 21-22 and 24-27
Valence-shell electron-pair repulsion (VSEPR) model
26. A model that accounts for the geometrical arrangements of shared and unshared electron pairs around a central atom in terms of the repulsions between electron pairs
resonance structure
26. One of two or more ALTERNATIVE Lewis structures for a molecule that cannot be described fully with a single Lewis Structure
bond enthalpy
26. The enthalpy change required to break a bond in 1 mole of gaseous molecules
Valence Shell
26. The outermost electron-occupied shell of an atom, which holds the electrons that are usually involved in bonding.
Resonance
26. The use of two or more Lewis structures to represent a particular molecule
sigma (σ) bonds
27. A covalent bond formed by orbitals overlapping end-to-end; its electron density is concentrated between he nuclei of the bonding atoms
pi (π) bonds
27. A covalent bond formed by sideways overlapping orbitals; its electron density is concentrated above and below the plane of the nuclei of the bonding atoms
homonuclear diatomic molecules
27. A diatomic molecule containing atoms of the same element
pi molecular orbital
27. A molecular orbital in which the electron density is concentrated above and below the plane of the two nuclei of the bonding atoms
sigma molecular orbital
27. A molecular orbital in which the electron density is concentrated around a line between the two nuclei of the bonding atoms
antibonding molecular orbital
27. A molecular orbital that is of higher energy and lower stability than the atomic orbitals from which it was formed
bonding molecular orbital
27. A molecular orbital that is of lower energy and greater stability than the atomic orbitals from which it was formed
diatomic molecules
27. A molecule that consists of two atoms
nonpolar molecules
27. A molecule that does not possess a dipole moment
Polar Molecules
27. A molecule that possess a dipole moment
molecular orbitals
27. An orbital that results from the interaction of the atomic orbitals of the bonding atoms
hybrid orbitals
27. Atomic orbitals obtained when two or more nonequivalent orbitals of the same atom combine
delocalized molecular orbitals
27. Molecular orbits that are not confined between two adjacent bonding atoms but actually extended over three of more atoms
bond order
27. The difference between the numbers of electrons in bonding molecular orbitals and antibonding molecular orbitals, divided by two
hybridization
27. The process of mixing the atomic orbitals in an atom (Usually the central atom) to generate a set of new atomic orbitals
Dipoole Moment (μ)
27. The product of charge and the distance between the charges in a molecule
electronegativity
25. the ability of an atom of an element to attract electrons toward itself in a chemical bond
Formal charge
25. the difference between the valence electrons in an isolated atom and the number of electrons assigned to that atom in a Lewis structure
bond length
25. the distance between the nuclei of two bonded atoms in a molecule
single bond
25. two atoms are held together by one electron pair
triple bond
25. two atoms are held together by three pairs of electrons
double bond
25. two atoms are held together by two pairs of electrons
Coordinate covalent bond
26. A bond in which the pair of electrons is supplied by one of the two bonded atoms; also called a dative bond
polar covalent bond
25. in such a bond, the electrons spend more time in the vicinity of one atom than the other
Aufbau principle
21. An electron occupies the lowest-energy orbital that can receive it
paramagnetic
21. Attracted by a magnet. A paramagnetic substance contains one or more unpaired electrons.
representative elements
21. Elements in Groups 1A through 7A, all of which have incompletely filled s or p subshells of the highest principal quantum number
transition metals
21. Elements that have incompletely filled d subshells or readily give rise to cations that have incompletely filled d subshells.
Pauli exclusion principle
21. No two electrons in an atom can have the same four quantum numbers
diamagnetic
21. Repelled by a magnet; a diamagnetic substance contains only paired electrons.
electron configuration
21. The distribution of electrons among the various orbitals in an atom or molecule
noble gas core
21. The electron configuration of the noble gas element that most nearly precedes the element being considered
valence electrons
21. The electrons in the outermost shell (main energy level) of an atom; these are the electrons involved in forming bonds.
Hund's Rule
21. The most stable arrangement of electrons in subshells is the one with the greatest number of parallel spins.
actinide series
21. a group of 14 elements following actinium in the periodic table, in which the 5f orbitals are being filled
core electrons
21. all nonvalence electrons in an atom
lanthanides (rare earth series)
21. have incompletely filled 4f subshells or readily give rise to cations that have incompletely filled 4f subshells
Isoelectronic
22. Ions, or atoms and ions, that possess the same number of electrons, and hence the same ground-state electron configuration, are said to be isoelectronic.
atomic radius
22. One-half the distance between the two nuclei in two adjacent atoms of the same element in a metal. For elements that exist as diatomic units, the atomic radius is one-half the distance between the nuclei of the two atoms in a particular molecule.
ionization energy (IE)
22. The minimum energy required to remove an electron from an isolated atom (or an ion) in its ground state
effective nuclear charge (Zeff)
22. The nuclear charge felt by an electron when both the actual charge (Z) and the repulsive effect (shielding) of the other electrons are taken into account
ionic radius
22. The radius of a cation or an anion as measured in an ionic compound (Distance from the center of an ion's nucleus to its outermost electron)
Born-Haber cycle
24. The cycle that relates lattice energies of ionic compounds to ionization energies, electron affinities, heats of sublimation and formation, and bond enthalpies
ionic bond
24. The electrostatic force that holds ions together in an ionic compound
electron affinity (EA)
24. The negative of the enthalpy change when an electron is accepted by an atom in the gaseous state to form an anion
Coulomb's law
24. The potential energy between two ions is directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the distance between them
Lewis dot symbol
24. The symbol of an element with one or more dots that represent the number of valence electrons in an atom of the element.
amphoteric
24. a substance that can act as both an acid and a base
diagonal relationships
24. similarities between pairs of elements in different groups and periods of the periodic table
Covalent Bond
25. A bond in which two electrons are shared by two atoms
Lewis Structure
25. A representation of covalent bonding using Lewis symbols; shared electron pairs are shown either as lines or as pairs of dots between two atoms, and lone pairs are shown as pairs of dots on individual atoms
Octet rule
25. An atom other than Hydrogen, tends to form bonds until it is surrounded by eight valence electrons
Covalent Compounds
25. Compounds containing only covalent bonds
Lone Pairs
25. Valence electrons that are not involved in covalent bond formations
multiple bonds
25. bonds formed when two atoms share two or more pairs of electrons