rules for predicting molecular geometry 1.  sketch the lewis structure of the molecule or ion

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Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion 2.  Count the electron pairs and arrange them in the way that  minimizes electron-pair repulsion. 3.  Determine the position of the atoms from the way the electron pairs are shared. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 2: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 3: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 4: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 5: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 6: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 7: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 8: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 9: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 10: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry

 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

2.  Count the electron pairs and arrange them in the way that  minimizes electron-pair repulsion.

3.  Determine the position of the atoms from the way the electron pairs are shared.

4.  Determine the name of the molecular structure from the position of the atoms.

5.  Double or triple bonds are counted as one bonding pair when predicting geometry.

Page 11: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 12: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

 Note: The same rules apply for molecules that contain more than one central atom

Page 13: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

The Dipole    A dipole arises when two electrical charges of equal

magnitude but opposite sign are separated by distance.

Page 14: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

The dipole moment (m)

m= Qr 

where Q is the magnitude of the charges and r is the distance

Page 15: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

The sum of these vectors will give us the dipole for the molecule

For a polyatomic molecule we treat the dipoles as 3D vectors

Page 16: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Overlap of Orbitals

Page 17: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

The point at which the potential energy is a minimum is called the equilibrium bond distance

The degree of overlap is determined by the system’s potential energy

equilibrium bond distance

Page 18: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

2s

These new orbitals are called hybrid orbitalsThe process is called hybridization

What this means is that both the s and one p orbital are involved in bonding to the connecting

atoms

Formation of sp hybrid orbitals

The combination of an s orbital and a p orbital produces 2 new orbitals called sp orbitals.

Page 19: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Formation of sp2 hybrid orbitals

Page 20: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Formation of sp3 hybrid orbitals

Page 21: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Hybrid orbitals can be used to explain bonding and molecular geometry

Page 22: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Multiple Bonds 

Everything we have talked about so far has only dealt with what we call sigma bonds

 Sigma bond (s) A bond where the line of electron density is concentrated symmetrically along the line connecting the two atoms.

Page 23: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Pi bond (p) A bond where the overlapping regions exist above and below the internuclear axis (with a nodal plane along the internuclear axis).

Page 24: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Example: H2C=CH2

Page 25: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Example: H2C=CH2

Page 26: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Example: HCCH

Page 27: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Delocalized p bonds When a molecule has two or more resonance structures,

the pi electrons can be delocalized over all the atoms that have pi bond overlap.

Page 28: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

In general delocalized p bonding is present in all molecules where we can draw resonance structures with

the multiple bonds located in different places.

Benzene is an excellent example.  For benzene the p orbitals all overlap leading to a very delocalized electron

system

Example: C6H6 benzene

Page 29: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

The one that is lower in energy is called the bonding orbital,

The one higher in energy is called an antibonding orbital.

These two new orbitals have different energies. 

BONDING

ANTBONDING

Moleculuar Orbital (MO) Theory

Page 30: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Energy level diagrams / molecular orbital diagrams

Page 31: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

MO Theory for 2nd row diatomic molecules

 Molecular Orbitals (MO’s) from Atomic Orbitals (AO’s) 1. # of Molecular Orbitals = # of Atomic Orbitals

2. The number of electrons occupying the Molecular orbitals is equal to the sum of the valence electrons on the constituent atoms.

3. When filling MO’s the Pauli Exclusion Principle Applies (2 electrons per Molecular Orbital)

4. For degenerate MO’s, Hund's rule applies.

5. AO’s of similar energy combine more readily than ones of different energy

6. The more overlap between AOs the lower the energy of the bonding orbital they create and the higher the energy of the antibonding orbital.

Page 32: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Example: Li2

Page 33: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

MOs from 2p atomic orbitals

1) 1 sigma bond through overlap of orbitals along the internuclear axis.

2) 2 pi bonds through overlap of orbitals above and below (or to the sides) of the internuclear axis.

s

p

Page 34: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion
Page 35: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Interactions between the 2s and 2p orbitals

The s2s and s2p molecular

orbitals interact with each other so as to lower the energy of the s2s MO and

raise the energy of the s2p MO.

Page 36: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

For B2, C2, and N2 the interaction is so strong that the s2p is pushed higher in energy than p2p orbitals

Page 37: Rules for Predicting Molecular Geometry 1.  Sketch the Lewis structure of the molecule or ion

Paramagnetism of O2