Bonding

अब Quizwiz के साथ अपने होमवर्क और परीक्षाओं को एस करें!

Why might the e⁻s not be shared equally betw 2 atoms that are different? (2)

(1) 1 atom may be bigger than other (↑atomic radius) (2) 1 atom may have greater nuclear charge (no. p⁺)

When show HB, (3)

(1) 3 dashed lines (2) 180⁰ across HB (3) show any lone pair(s)

Requirements for HB (2)

(1) H covalently bonded to NOF (highly elec-ve) (2) Lone pair on 2nd NOF

Why are HBs so much stronger?

(1) NOF atoms have lone pairs of e-s (2) H atoms are highly e- deficient → NOF is v. elec-ve → attracts e-s toward itself → H +ve charge and v. small → v. strong elec field (bc small)

3 types of IMFs

(1) Van der Waals Forces (2) Dipole-dipole forces (3) Hydrogen bonding

Effect of lone pairs on bond angle (2)

(1) lone pairs repel more than bond pairs (1) bond angle will be lower

Perfume is a mixture of fragrant compounds dissolved in a volatile solvent. When applied to the skin, the solvent evaporates, causing the skin to cool for a short time. After a while, the fragrance may be detected some distance away. Explain these observations. (4)

(1) solvent has low Bpt/weak IMFs (2) solvent needs E to evaporate (overcome IMFs) (3) E taken from skin (so cools) (4) fragrance slowly spreads (5) by diffusion

Because VdW Fs caused by changing position of e⁻ cloud (3)

(1)↑e⁻ = ↑inst. dipole (2) VdWF size α no e⁻ present (3) VdWF size α Ar/Mr

Dative covalent bond

(2 e-s can come from just one of the atoms) Shared pair of e⁻s (lone pair) on X donated to Y

Water - liquid - solid

(Liquid) HBs break and reform easily as molec move (Solid) water molecules not free to move - HBs held in fixed positions - molecule packed less closely - ↓ρ — form on top of ponds

evidence of spacing - s, l, g

- (s) not easily compressed - (l) not easily compressed - (g) easily compressed

Strength of HB

- 10% of covalent - weaker so can break/make in conditions where covalent unaffected

In terms of e- pairs, explain why the bond angles in NH₄⁺ are all 109⁰ (4)

- 4 bonding pairs of e⁻ - repel equally - as far apart as possible - tetrahedron

diamond

- C - macromolecular - 4 covalent bonds/ea C atom - giant 3D lattice of strong covalent bonds = v. hard = v. high Mpt = doesn't conduct elec (no free charged particles)

graphite

- C - strong covalent and weaker VdWFs - ea C forms 3 cov bonds (= 'trigonal planar') - leave spare delocalised e- in p orbital = conduct elec (deloc e-)(along planes of hexagons) = soft (layers can slide over each other (held by weak VdWF) = v. high Mpt (cov bonds)

Dipole-dipole Fs - HCl

- Cl more electronegative than H - e⁻ pulled towards Cl atom - → dipole

Explain, in terms of the IMFs present in each compound, why HF has a higher Bpt than HCl (3)

- HF = Hydrogen bonding - HCl = permanent dipole-dipole bonding - HBs strongest IMF

turning a (s) to (l) - fusion

- T doesn't change - heat E provided is absorbed as the forces betw particles are weakened

How do VdW Fs work? (5)

- at any instant, the e- cloud may be distorted - 1 side (fewer e-) = δ⁺ (& converse) - instantaneous dipole - this dipole induces polarity on another atom

2 biological examples of dative covalent bonding

- chlorophyll - haemoglobin

spacing - s, l, g

- close - close - far apart

evidence of 3 states of matter arrangement - (s)

- crystal shapes have straight edges - solids have definite shapes

evidence of movement - s, l, g

- diffusion: v. slow - expand on heating - diffusion: slow - evaporate - diffusion: rapid - exert pressure

Why is ice being less dense important?

- forms on top of ponds - insulate pond - fish live through winter - help life continue

4 basic crystal types

- ionic - metallic - molecular - macromolecular

Why do lone pairs affect bond angle? (2)

- lone pairs repel more than bonding pairs

Why are lone pairs of e- opposite each other?

- lone pairs repel more than bonding pairs - so are as far apart as possible

elec conductivity - metals - alloys - ionic - covalent

- metals & alloys: (s) and (l) -- deloc e- that hold metal ions together - (l) or (dissolved in water) -- ions - gen. don't -- no charged particles

Noble gases - BPts (4)

- molar mass increases down the group - so no. e⁻ ↑ - VdW Fs get stronger - → Bpt ↑

molecular crystals - low Mpt/enthalpies of melting

- molec held in a reg array by IMF (not covalent (w/in)) - VdWFs much weaker than covalent/ionic/metallic

macromolecular - high Mpt

- must break strong covalent bonds (- not weak IMF) e.g. graphite, diamond, SiO2

evidence of 3 states of matter arrangement - (l)

- none direct but a (l) changes shape to fill bottom of container

what happens when heat gas?

- particles gain more KE - move faster - get much further apart - expand a lot

Uses for HB (3)

- proteins (C=O, N-H) - ironing (heat breaks HBs in creased mat) - DNA (HB hold 2 strands together - templates for dna replication)

arrangement of particles - s - l - g

- regular - random - random

What does δ⁺ mean?

- slight positive charge - e- deficient

what happens when heat solid?

- supply E to particles - makes them vibrate more about a fixed posn - slightly increase avg d betw particles - solid expands

movement - s, l, g

- vibrate about a point - rapid 'jostling' - rapid

How to draw molecules with lone pairs

1. Draw dot and cross diagram (+/- e- to main middle atom for charge as needed)2. Count no. bonding and lone pairs of e- 3. See basic shape 4. Reduce angle per lone pair (2 or 2.5⁰)

dative covalent bond Qs - 2 NBs

1. must be specific with what element donates (& receives) 2. be specific with whether atom/molecule/ion (chlorine or chloride)

Dimer

2 molecules joined together

covalent bond between

2 non metals

Reduce angle how many degrees per lone pair?

2 or 2.5⁰

A bond might be covalent with a _____ of ionic character A bond might be ionic with a _____ of covalent character

A bond might be covalent with degree of ionic character A bond might be ionic with degree of covalent character

When partial charges are separated like C-Cl... what forms?

A dipole forms

What is electronegativity?

Ability of an atom to attract e⁻s/e⁻ density in a covalent bond to itself

silver ion

Ag⁺

There are weak electrostatic attractions between all atoms and molecules (VdWFs) because

All atoms made up of +ve and -ve charges (even though neutral overall)

Van der Waals forces act between

All atoms/molecules at all times

Aluminium chloride has Mr = 267 - formula?

Al₂Cl₆

what is a lone pair of e-?

An unshared electron pair in a covalent bond

VdW Fs are additional to

Any other IMFs

HB - why does NOF need lone pair of e-

Attached to δ⁺ H in another molecule → HB

2 molecules which both have dipoles will... - why?

Attract one another - no matter start position (repel → 'flip' → attract)

barium ion

Ba²⁺

Bpts - H₂O, HF, NH₃ - higher than those of the hydrides of the other elements in their group

Bc HBs betw - ↑IMF of attraction - req more E to separate

Boiling points of noble gases - gradual increase in Bpt

Bc only IMF = VdW - ↑w/ no. e- present

Shape - e⁻ pairs 2 bonding pairs 2 lone pairs

Bent 104.5⁰

Shape - e⁻ pairs 2 bonding pairs 1 lone pair

Bent 118⁰

carbonate ion

CO₃²⁻

VdW Fs caused by (1)

Changing position of e⁻ cloud

Electronegativity C-Cl bond

Cl more electronegative than C → gains partial -ve charge →→ δ⁻ C gains partial +ve charge →δ⁺

Dative covalent bond aka

Coordinate bond

Allotropes

Different forms of the same element

Dipole moment sums up

Effect of all the bonds in the molecule - in molec w/ >1 polar bond, the effects of each bond may (1) cancel → molec with no dipole moment (2) add up → reinforce each other

AlCl₃ to Al₂Cl₆

Exists as a dimer - when sublime to (g)

iron (II) ion

Fe²⁺

iron (III) ion

Fe³⁺

Element with highest electronegativity value

Fluorine

How to work out shape of molecule? e.g. SO₄²⁻

Gives shape but not double bonds

What molecules have all 3 IMFs?

H covalently bonded NOF

where do hydroxonium ions come from? e.g. HCl

HCl → H⁺(aq) + Cl⁻(aq) H⁺ ion quickly bonds to H₂O → H₃O⁺

Why does water have higher Bpt than NH₃ & HF

H₂O can form 4 HBs NH₃ - 2

HCs: Bpts

Increase as chain length increase - molar mass increases down the group - so no. e⁻ ↑ - VdW Fs get stronger - → Bpt ↑

Elements become more/less electronegative as you go down a group

Less electronegative

Electronegativity Polar bonding

Lies between the 2 extremes of ionic and covalent bonding electronegativity diff = 0.5-2.0 A bond might be only slightly polar

Shape - e⁻ pairs 2

Linear 180⁰

What scale is often used to show relative electronegativity values?

Linus Pauling's scale

What is a polar molecule?

Molecule with both a slight +ve bole and a -ve pole

Dipole-dipole Fs act between

Molecules with permanent dipoles

Elements become more/less electronegative as you go from L to R across a period

More electronegative

property that best shows giant or simple molecular

Mpt (/Bpt)

ammonium ion

NH₄⁺

sodium hydrogen sulphate

NaHSO₄

What difference does a charge have on the shape of a molecule?

None - but when drawing e-, pay attention

How does atomic radius affect electronegativity?

Nucl of smaller atom closer to shared pair of e⁻s → greater FoA betw smaller-atom nucleus & shared e⁻ pair

O-H - polar

O is more electronegative than H → pulls the shared pair of e⁻s towards itself

Shape - e⁻ pairs 6

Octahedral 90⁰

VdW Original [atom] has ___ ___ in the _____ which will be _____

Original [atom] has induced dipoles in the nearby atoms which will be attracted to original [atom]

What does pulling a shared pair of e⁻s towards itself cause? (O-H)

Partial -ve (δ⁻) charge on O atom Partial +ve (δ⁺) charge on H atom

Lead ion

Pb²⁺

How does nuclear charge affect electronegativity?

RH atom has greater nuclear charge than LH atom → greater FoA betw nucl of RH (7+) atom & shared pair of e⁻s (than LH (5+) atom and shared pair of e⁻s)

Forming bond - exo/endo

Release E - Endo

Shape - e⁻ pairs 4 bonding pairs 1 lone pair

See saw 90⁰, 120⁰

Dipole moment depends on

Shape of molecule

Covalent bond is

Share e-s - attraction between +ve nuclei and their shared e- forms bond

Shape - e⁻ pairs 4 bonding pairs 2 lone pairs

Square planar 90⁰

Shape - e⁻ pairs 5 bonding pairs 1 lone pair

Square pyramid (umbrella) 90⁰

HB - why does H atom need to be bonded to a v. elec-ve atom?

Strong partial +ve charge (δ⁺) on H atom

Shape - e⁻ pairs 4

Tetrahedral 109.5⁰

Covalent bond between 2 atoms that are the same e.g. H₂ - e⁻s?

The e⁻s are shared equally betw the atoms - identical FoA betw nucleus of ea atom & shared pair of e⁻s

Covalent bond between 2 atoms that are different - e⁻s?

The e⁻s may not be shared equally betw the atoms

What is attracted to what - H₂O molecules

The lone pair of e- on [O] of another [H₂O] molecule is strongly attracted to e- deficient H atom

Electronegativity Ionic bonding occurs when

There are big differences in electronegativity - usually betw metal and non-metal

Electronegativity Covalent bonding occurs when

There are small differences in electronegativity, - usually between 2 non-metals

Effect of double bonds on molecule shape

Treat as single bonds - behave exactly as single for repulsion purposes - shape same

Shape - e⁻ pairs 5

Trigonal bipyramid 90⁰, 120⁰

Shape - e⁻ pairs 3

Trigonal planar 120⁰

Shape - e⁻ pairs 3 bonding pairs 2 lone pairs

Trigonal planar 120⁰

Shape - e⁻ pairs 3 bonding pairs 1 lone pair

Trigonal pyramidal 107⁰

Strength of imfs - order

VdW < Dipole-dipole < HBs

electron deficient

atoms that can have less than an octet - Be, B, Al can form covalent molecules don't achieve a full outer shell

-ate on anion means e.g. sulphate

cont. O → SO₄²⁻

ionic - how to identify compound formula

crossover rule

Why is HB (N-H-O) linear (180⁰)?

e- pair in N-H covalent bond repels e-s in HB between N and H

where does the extra e come from in a hydroxide ion?

e.g. KOH → K⁺ + OH⁻ - e from K → K⁺ donated to OH → OH⁻

hypervalent elements

e.g. S, P, Si, Cl

property that best shows bonding type

electrical conductivity

E needed to melt aka

enthalpy change of melting/fusion

E needed to vaporise liquid aka

enthalpy change of vaporisation

enthalpy vs T

heat energy change measured under constant pressure T depends on avg KE of particles and so related to speed - greater E = faster

Strongest IMF

hydrogen bonding (weaker than covalent)

metallic crystals/bonding

lattice of positive ions embedded in a delocalised sea of e- - attraction of +ve to -ve (! count no. e- drawn to ion)

ionic bonding involves (3)

many strong electrostatic attraction between oppositely-charged ions in a giant ionic lattice

ionic bond is between

metal and non-metal

why do molecular crystals not conduct electricity?

no charged particles to carry charge

evidence of 3 states of matter arrangement - (g)

none direct but a gas will fill its container

-ide on anion means e.g. sulphide

only one element → S⁻

What is an intermolecular force?

the force of attraction between atoms/molecules

The greater the difference between the electronegativity values...

the greater the polarity of the covalent bond

since bond forming is exothermic, electron-deficient compounds (Be, B, Al) are still...

thermodynamically stable - E is released when the elements bond to form a molecule

ionic - electricity

will conduct if molten/dissolved


संबंधित स्टडी सेट्स

(PrepU) Chapter 39: Management of Patients with Oral and Esophageal Disorders

View Set

Macroeconomics Exam 3 Chapter 20

View Set

ECO 361: Chapter 5, ECO 361: Chapter 6, ECO 361: Chapter 7, ECO 361: Chapter 8, Econ 335 final exam Ch. 7, Econ 335 final exam ch.10, Econ 335 final exam ch. 11, Econ 335 final exam ch. 12, Econ 335 final exam ch.15, ECON CH. 16, Pre Exam 1, ECON3171...

View Set

Ch 7: Brokerage Relationships: Law & Practice

View Set