5. bonding and intermolecular...

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1 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Lewis Structures

Valence Electrons

The Octet Rule

3D Diagrams & VSEPR

© Boardworks Ltd 20086 of 8

Electron Shell (Bohr) Diagrams

• A shell diagram

shows all electrons,

but we are most

interested in the

electrons in the

outermost energy

level called the

valence level or

valence shell.

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Bohr Models: How to

• Used to represent a model of an atom.

• To draw a Bohr model follow these steps:

(We will use Helium as an example)

© Boardworks Ltd 20088 of 8

Making a Bohr Model Using Helium

1. Look to the periodic table and determine

how many protons, neutrons and

electrons are in 1 atom of helium.

P=____ N=_____ E=_____

2. Draw a circle and label the # of P and N in

the inside of the circle

P= 2

N= 2

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Making a Bohr Model Using Helium

3. Draw your 1st electron shell.

4. Draw up to 2 electrons in the 1st shell.

5. If you need to add more electrons, you need to

add more electron shells! Remember…2, 8, 8!!!

P= 2

N= 2

P= 2

N= 2

© Boardworks Ltd 200812 of 8

Valence Electrons are:

The electrons in the outermost shell

Responsible for atomic bonding

Equal to the last digit of the group number

How many valence electrons in this atom? What

group would it be in?

Valence electrons REVISITED

© Boardworks Ltd 200813 of 8

Lewis Dot Diagrams for the Elements

A Lewis dot structure for an atom consists of the

symbol for the element and one dot for each

valence electron.

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How to Draw a Lewis Structure

1) Find your element on the periodic table.

2) Determine the number of valence

electrons by looking at the group

(column)

3) This is how many electrons you will draw.

© Boardworks Ltd 200815 of 8

Lewis Structures

1) Write the element

symbol.

2) Carbon is in the 14th

group, so it has 4

valence electrons.

3) Starting at the right,

draw 4 electrons, or

dots, counter-

clockwise around the

element symbol.

© Boardworks Ltd 200817 of 8

Lewis Structures

What would the Lewis Dot Structure for

Phosphorus look like?

Maximum 2 dots per side

(4 sides = 8 dots)

It does not matter which

side you start on.

You have to fill in each

side with one dot before

you double up…

20 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Represent the number of valence electrons as dots

Valence number is the same as the Periodic Table Group Number

H

Li Be B C N O F Ne

He

Na; Is2, 2s2, 2p6, 3s1 = [Ne] 3s1

Lewis Structure = Na

For example,

Groups 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

n = 1

n = 2

Lewis Symbols

21 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Electron Dot Diagrams

Draw electron dot diagrams of the following elements:

1. Carbon 6. Hydrogen

2. Nitrogen 7. Chlorine

3. Phosphorus 8. Argon

4. Boron 9. Iodine

5. Oxygen 10. Helium

22 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Electron Dot Diagrams

1. Carbon

2. Nitrogen

3. Phosphorus

4. Boron

5. Oxygen

6. Hydrogen

7. Chlorine

8. Argon

9. Iodine

10. Helium

23 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Elements want to achieve the

stable electron configuration

of the nearest noble gas

Octet Rule:

Atoms tend to gain, lose or share electrons until they are

surrounded by 8 electrons

Stable “Octets”

Ne

n = 2

n = 3

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Lewis Structure Rules for BONDING

25 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Lewis Structures of Simple Ionic Compounds

• Determine the charge expected for each ion

• Add or removed specific numbers of electrons

• Arrange non-metal atoms symmetrically around the metal ion

Example of Ionic Bonding

26 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Ionic Bonding refers to electrostatic forces between ions, usually a

metal cation and a non-metal anion

Covalent Bonding results from the sharing of two electrons between

two atoms (usually non-metals) resulting in molecules

Two Types of Bonding

H H H H

Cl Cl ClCl

N N NN

+

number of electrons around each atom = He

+

number of electrons around each atom = Ar

+

number of electrons around each atom = NeTriple bond

Each covalent bond contains 2 electrons

Octet Rule Applies

27 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Covalent Bonding in Carbon

H

CH H

H

methane

Carbon has 4 valence electrons

C

H

H

H

H

H C

Ne

Neon

Stable Octet required

Example of Covalent Bonding

Lewis structures show

how Valence Electrons

are distributed in a

molecule.

28 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Electron Dot Diagrams

• Some electrons are already paired up within a

single atom and are not shared.

• These are called non-bonding / unshared

pairs.

29 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Electron Dot Diagrams

Some elements

are able to share

more than one

pair of electrons

to form double

and triple bonds

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Converting Lewis Structures into 3D

The process of inferring a three-dimensional

shape from a Lewis structure is based on a

very simple premise:

Valence electrons represent regions of negative

charge that repel each other.

36 of 43 © Boardworks Ltd 2009

Converting Lewis Structures into 3D

• Any group of valence electrons associated with a central

atom will tend to orient themselves in three-dimensional

space around that atom so as to minimize the repulsion

between them.

• Examples : lone pair, bonding pair, or multiple pairs

involved in a double or triple bond.

While remaining attached to the

central atom, these groups of

electrons will position

themselves as far away from

each other as possible.

This is the fundamental principle

behind the valence shell

electron pair repulsion (VSEPR)

theory

© Boardworks Ltd 200837 of 8

VSEPR Theory

• Based on Electron Dot (Lewis structures)

• Theory predicts shapes of compounds• abbreviated VSEPR

• VSEPR (pronounced “vesper”) stands for Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion

• VSEPR predicts shapes based on electron pairs repelling (in bonds or by themselves)

• Electrons around central nucleus repel each other. So, structures have atoms maximally spread out

© Boardworks Ltd 200838 of 8

• Each shape has a name

Names of Shapes:• tetrahedral

• trigonal pyramidal

• Bent

• Linear

• trigonal planar

VSEPR Overview

© Boardworks Ltd 200840 of 8

C

H

H

H

H methane, CH4

Bonds are all evenly spaced electrons

109.5°

C

H

H

H

H

Tetrahedral

© Boardworks Ltd 200841 of 8

NH H

HC

H

H

H

H

Less repulsion between the bonding pairs of electrons.. ammonia

NH3

....

..

Trigonal Pyramidal

© Boardworks Ltd 200842 of 8

C

H

H

H

H NH H

H

OH H.. ..

..

109.5° (109.5°) 109.5° (107°) 109.5° (104.5°)

water, H2O

Bent (or angular)

© Boardworks Ltd 200843 of 8

C

H

H

H

H NH H

H

OH H.. ..

..

© Boardworks Ltd 200844 of 8

H

CH H

H

NH H

H

OH H

Bent or V

2 unshared pairs of e’s at top of O

repel bonds and force them to

bend

© Boardworks Ltd 200845 of 8

Linear

• The shape is linear with the X–A–X bond

angle being 180°

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Trigonal Planar

• The shape is linear with the X–A–X bond

angle being 180°

© Boardworks Ltd 200847 of 8

Lewis StructureVSEPR

© Boardworks Ltd 200848 of 8

Practice Questions

© Boardworks Ltd 200849 of 8

© Boardworks Ltd 200850 of 8

Groups of

charge

Lone electron

pairs

Electronic

geometry

Molecular

shape

2 0 Linear Linear

3 0 Trigonal planar Trigonal planar

3 1 Trigonal planar Bent

4 0 Tetrahedral Tetrahedral

4 1 TetrahedralTrigonal

pyramid

4 2 Tetrahedral Bent

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