ap chemistry chapter 8 bonding. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -we can...

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AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING

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Page 1: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8BONDING

Page 2: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond

-We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Page 3: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

ionic compound- a metal reacts with a nonmetal

• Ionic bonds form when an atom that loses electrons easily reacts with an atom that has a high affinity for electrons. The charged ions are held together by their mutual attraction (Coulombic attraction).

• Ionic bonds form because the ion pair has lower energy than the separated ions. All bonds form in order to reach a lower energy level.

Page 4: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Bond length- the distance where the energy is at a minimum. We have a balance among proton-proton repulsion, electron-electron repulsion, and proton-electron attraction.In H2, the two e− will usually be found between the two H atoms because they are spontaneously attracted to both protons. Therefore, electrons are shared by both nuclei. This is called covalent bonding.

Page 5: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction
Page 6: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Polar covalent bonds occur when electrons are not shared equally. One end of the molecule may have a partial charge. This is called a dipole.

+ H F H H

+ -

O -

Page 7: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Electronegativity- the ability of an atom in a molecule to attract shared electrons to itself.-determined by comparing the measured bond energy and the expected bond energy. Expected H—X = H—H bond energy + X—X bond energybond energy 2

Electronegativity difference = (Actual H—X bond energy) – (expected H—X bond energy)

If X has a greater electronegativity than H, the e−’s are closer to X and the molecule is polar. If the electronegativities are the same, the molecule is nonpolar.

Page 8: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Periodic Trends-Electronegativity generally increases across a period and decreases down a group. It ranges from 0.79 for cesium to 4.0 for fluorine.

Page 9: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

+ − H—F polar H—H nonpolar has dipole moment O+ + H H O S O bent, polar O − has dipole moment planar

no dipole moment

CH4 tetrahedral NH3 trigonal pyramidal no dipole moment has dipole moment

Page 10: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction
Page 11: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction
Page 12: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction
Page 13: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Electron Configurations:

Stable compounds usually have atoms with noble gas electron configurations.

Two nonmetals react to form a covalent bond by sharing electrons to gain valence electron configurations.

Page 14: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

When a nonmetal and a group A metal react to form a binary ionic compound, the ions form so that the valence electron configuration of the nonmetal is completed and the valence orbitals of the metal are emptied to give both noble gas configurations.

Page 15: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ions form to get noble gas configurations.-exceptions in Group A metals:

Sn2+ & Sn4+

Pb2+ &Pb4+

Bi3+ & Bi5+

Tl+ & Tl 3+

Metals with d electrons will lose their highest numerical energy level electrons before losing their inner d electrons.

Page 16: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Size of IonsPositive ions (cations) are smaller than their

parent atoms since they are losing electrons. (More protons than electrons=greater nuclear pull)

Negative ions (anions) are larger than their parent atoms since they are gaining electrons.

(Fewer protons than electrons= lower nuclear pull)

Think: Monster Ants & miniature cats

Page 17: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ion size increases going down a group.

Page 18: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Isoelectronic ions

–ions containing the same number of electrons O2−, F−, Na+, Mg2+, Al3+ all have the Ne configuration. They are isoelectronic.

*** For an isoelectronic series, size decreases as Z increases.

Page 19: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Lattice energy- the change in energy that takes place when separated gaseous ions are packed together to form an ionic solid. Na+(g) + Cl−(g) NaCl(s)

If exothermic, the sign will be negative and the ionic solid will be the stable form.

We can use a variety of steps to determine the heat of formation of an ionic solid from its elements. This is called the Born-Haber cycle. See examples on pages 366 & 368.

Page 20: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Lattice energy can be calculated using the following:

where k is a proportionality constant that depends on the structure of the solid and the electron configuration of the ions. Q1 & Q2 are the charges on the ions. r is the distance between the center of the cation and the anion.

Since the ions will have opposite charges, lattice energy will be negative (exothermic).

The attractive force between a pair of oppositely charged ions increases with increased charge on the ions or with decreased ionic sizes.

r

QQk

21energy Lattice

Page 21: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction
Page 22: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

The Structure of Lithium Fluoride

Page 23: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction
Page 24: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Compounds with more than 50% ionic character are considered to be ionic (electronegativity diff. of about 1.7).

There are probably no totally ionic bonds. Percent ionic character in binary compounds can be calculated. Percent ionic character increases with electronegativity difference.

Page 25: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

The Relationship Between the Ionic Character of a Covalent Bond and the Electronegativity Difference of the Bonded Atoms

Page 26: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Three Possible Types of Bonds

Page 27: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Polyatomic ions are held together by covalent bonds. We call Na2SO4 ionic even though it has 4 covalent bonds and 2 ionic bonds.

Ionic compound- any solid that conducts an electrical current when melted or dissolved in water

Salt- an ionic compound

Page 28: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

A chemical bond is a model “invented” by scientists to explain stability of compounds. A bond really represents an amount of energy. The bonding model helps us understand and describe molecular structure. It is supported by much research data. However, some data suggests that electrons are delocalized. That is, they are not associated with a particular atom in a molecule.

Page 29: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

• Single bond- one pair of shared electrons• Double bond- two pair of shared electrons• Triple bond- three pair of shared electrons

Page 30: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

These values may be slightly different from those in your text. Use the textbook values for your homework.

Page 31: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Looking at the chart on the previous slide, what is the relationship between bond length and bond energy?

Is there a relationship between number of bonds and bond energy?

Page 32: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Bond energies and bond lengths are given in tables on page 374.

We can use bond energies to calculate heats of reaction.

H = D(bonds broken)- D(bonds formed)

2H2 + O2 2H2O

Ex. H = [2(432) + 495] –[4(467)] = −509 kJ

2 H−H O=O 4H−O exothermic

Page 33: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Bonding Models:

Molecular Orbital Model-

Electrons occupy orbitals in a molecule in much the same way as they occupy orbitals in atoms.

Electrons do not belong to any one atom.

-very complex model

Page 34: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Localized electron model-

• molecules are composed if atoms that are bound together by sharing pairs of electrons using the atomic orbitals of the bound atoms

• traditional model

Page 35: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

lone pair- pair of electrons localized on an atom (nonbonding)

shared pair or bonding pair- electrons found in the space between atoms

Page 36: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Lewis structure -shows how the valence electrons are arranged among the atoms in the molecule

Page 37: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

The most important requirement for the formation of a stable compound is that the atoms achieve noble gas configurationsionic [ Na ]+ [Cl]−

only valence electrons are included

molecular H2O

H – O - H

Page 38: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

duet rule- hydrogen forms stable molecules when it shares two electrons H:H-filled valence shell

Why does He not form bonds?Its valence orbitals are already filled.

octet rule – most elements need 8 electrons to complete their valence shell Cl-Cl

Page 39: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Rules for writing Lewis structures

1. Add up the number of valence electrons from all atoms.

2. Use 2 electrons to form a bond between each pair of bound atoms. A dash represents a pair of shared electrons.

3. Arrange the remaining electrons to satisfy the duet rule for H and the octet rule for most others.

Page 40: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ex. H2S # of valence electrons: 1 + 1 + 6 = 8

H − S − H

Page 41: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ex. CO2 # of valence electrons = 4 + 6 + 6 = 16

O – C – O This uses 20 electrons!

O = C = O

Page 42: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

NH3 has 8 valence electrons

H

N− H

H

Page 43: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

HCN

HCN has 10 valence electrons.

H−C≡N

Page 44: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

NO+

NO+ has 5 + 6 −1 = 10 electrons

N≡O

Page 45: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

CO32−

Carbonate has 4 + 18 + 2 = 24 valence electrons.

O 2−

C O

O

Page 46: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Exceptions:Boron and beryllium tend to form compounds where the B or Be atom have fewer than 8 electrons around them. BF3 = 24 valence electrons

F B F FCommon AP equation: NH3 + BF3 H3NBF3

Page 47: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

C, N, O, F always obey the octet rule.

Page 48: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Some elements in Period 3 and beyond exceed the octet rule.Ex. SF6 S has 12 electrons around it48 valence electrons

F F F F S F F

Page 49: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

d orbitals are used to accommodate the extra electrons.Elements in the 1st or 2nd period of the table can’t exceed the octet rule because there is no d sublevel.If the octet rule can be exceeded, the extra electrons are placed on the central atom.

Page 50: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Examples of exceptions Ex. I3

−, ClF3, RnCl2

I - I - I F

F - Cl - F

Cl - Rn - Cl

Page 51: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Resonance- -occurs when more than one valid Lewis structure can be written for a particular moleculeactual structure is an average of all resonance structures-this concept is needed to fit the localized electron model (electrons are really delocalized)

Page 52: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ex. Benzene, C6H6

All bond lengths and angles are the same.

Page 53: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ex. SO3

All 3 structures are equivalent. The bonds can be thought of as 1 1/3 bonds.

Page 54: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Formal Charge-used to determine the most accurate Lewis structure-is the difference between the # of valence electrons on the free atom and the # of valence electrons assigned to the atom in the molecule

Page 55: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

-atoms try to achieve formal charges as close to zero as possible-any negative formal charges are expected to reside on the most electronegative atoms-Sum of the formal charges must equal the overall charge on the molecule (zero) or ion.

Page 56: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

FORMAL CHARGEFORMAL CHARGEFormal ChargeFormal Charge The charge on an atom in amolecule or ion, based on a prescribed procedurefor counting which electrons may be assigned toeach individual atom.

Formal ChargeFormal Charge

N:... ..

N:....

H

H

NH2-

BondedUnbonded

Number of All One half of = valence electrons unshared + all shared in the neutral electrons electrons atom

( Formal Charge = 5 - 4 - 2 = -1 )

5e- 6e-

Page 57: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Ex. SO42−

O 2− O 2−

O S O O S O

O O

Formal charge only needs to be considered on the AP test if it is specifically asked for.

Page 58: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

VSEPR-Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion-allows us to use electron dot structures to determine molecular shapes-the structure around a given atom is determined primarily by minimizing electron repulsions-bonding and nonbonding pairs of electrons around an atom position themselves as far apart as possible

Page 59: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Steps:1. Draw Lewis structure2. Count effective electron pairs on central atom (double and triple bonds count as one)3. Arrange the electron pairs as far apart as possible

Page 60: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

ShapesAX2 (A represents central atom, X represents attached atom, E represents unshared electron pair) X – A – X linear 180o bond angle

O=C=O Cl – Be – Cl

Page 61: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX3 Shape is trigonal planar X X A 120o bond angle F F X BF3 B F Any resonance SO3 structure can be used to O− S = O determine shape. O

Page 62: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX2E Shape is bentBond angle is < 120o X X A EEx. SnCl2 Cl Cl Sn

Page 63: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX4 Shape is tetrahedral Bond angle is 109.5o

X Ex. CH4 H X A X H C H X H

Page 64: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Figure 8.14The Molecular Structure of Methane

Page 65: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX3E Shape is trigonal pyramidal Bond angle is < 109.5o

Ex. NH3

H - N- H H

Page 66: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Figure 8.15The Molecular Structure of NH3

Page 67: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX2E2 Shape is bent Bond angle is < 109.5o

Unshared electron pairs repel more than shared pair. Lone pairs require more space than share pairs. E Ex. H2O X A X E H – O − H

Page 68: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Figure 8.16The Molecular Structure of H2O

Page 69: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Figure 8.17The Bond Angles in the CH4, NH3, and H2O

Molecules

Page 70: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX5 Shape is trigonal bipyramidal Bond angles are 120o(equatorial) and 90o(axial) X X A X X XEx. PCl5

Cl Cl P Cl Cl Cl

Page 71: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX4E Shape is see-sawBond angles are <90o and <120o

X E A X X XEx. SF4 34 electrons

F S F F F

Page 72: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Figure 8.20Three Possible Arrangements of the

Electron Pairs in the I3− Ion

Page 73: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX3E2 Shape is T-shaped Bond angle is <90o

X E A X E XEx. ClF3

F Cl F F

Page 74: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX2E3 shape is linear bond angle is 180o

X E A E E XEx. XeF2

F Xe

F

Page 75: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

Figure 8.19Possible Electron Pair Arrangements for XeF4

Page 76: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX6 shape is octahedral bond angle is 90o

X X X AX X XEx. SF6

F F F SF F F

Page 77: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX5E Shape is square pyramidal Bond angle is <90o

X X X AX X EEx. BrF5

F F F BrF F

Page 78: AP CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 8 BONDING. bond energy- energy required to break a chemical bond -We can measure bond energy to determine strength of interaction

AX4E2 Shape is square planar. Bond angle is 90o. E X X AX X E

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