standard 3.2 covalent compounds. everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur....

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Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds

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Page 1: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Standard 3.2

Covalent Compounds

Page 2: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine. Please hold your element’s

valence electrons in your hand.

Page 3: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine. Please hold your element’s

valence electrons in your hand.

• Walk around the room and exchange electrons with your classmates in such a way that both you and your classmates end up being stable. Stay with your trading partner(s) when everyone in your trading group has become stable.

Page 4: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Formation of covalent compounds

• Covalent compounds form when nonmetals share electrons.

Page 5: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Formation of covalent compounds

• Covalent compounds form when nonmetals share electrons.

• Because all nonmetals tend to gain valence electrons, the valence electrons must be shared to complete the octets.

Page 6: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Formation of covalent compounds

• Covalent compounds form when nonmetals share electrons.

• Because all nonmetals tend to gain valence electrons, the valence electrons must be shared to complete the octets.

• When electrons are shared between atoms, the bonds are relatively weak.

Page 7: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

Page 8: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

• Generally gases at room temperature.

Page 9: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

• Generally gases at room temperature.

• Some are liquids or solids.

Page 10: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

• Generally gases at room temperature.

• Some are liquids or solids.

• The solids have soft crystals.

Page 11: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

• Generally gases at room temperature.

• Some are liquids or solids.

• The solids have soft crystals.

• Strong odor

Page 12: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

• Generally gases at room temperature.

• Some are liquids or solids.

• The solids have soft crystals.

• Strong odor

• Flammable

Page 13: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Weak bonds mean…

• Low melting and boiling points.

• Generally gases at room temperature.

• Some are liquids or solids.

• The solids have soft crystals.

• Strong odor

• Flammable

• Non-electrolytes

Page 14: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Polar vs nonpolar covalent molecules

• The smallest unit of a covalent compound is called a molecule.

Page 15: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Polar vs nonpolar covalent molecules

• The smallest unit of a covalent compound is called a molecule.

• Molecules can be polar (a negative and positive region) or nonpolar.

Page 16: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Polar vs nonpolar covalent molecules

• The smallest unit of a covalent compound is called a molecule.

• Molecules can be polar (a negative and positive region) or nonpolar.

• The more polar a molecule, the stronger its bonds are.

Page 17: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Polar vs nonpolar covalent molecules

• The smallest unit of a covalent compound is called a molecule.

• Molecules can be polar (a negative and positive region) or nonpolar.

• The more polar a molecule, the stronger its bonds are.

• Compounds with similar polarities will dissolve one another (“like dissolves like”)

Page 18: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Determining Polarity

• To determine whether a compound is polar or nonopolar, we need to first look at the difference in electronegativity between the atoms being bonded (table on p.265).

Page 19: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Determining Polarity

• To determine whether a compound is polar or nonopolar, we need to first look at the difference in electronegativity between the atoms being bonded (table on p.265).

• If the difference is less than 0.40, the molecule is nonpolar (CH4 as an example).

Page 20: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Determining Polarity

• To determine whether a compound is polar or nonopolar, we need to first look at the difference in electronegativity between the atoms being bonded (table on p.265).

• If the difference is less than 0.40, the molecule is nonpolar (CH4 as an example).

• If the difference is greater than 0.40, a Lewis structure is needed (CO2).

Page 21: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Drawing a Lewis structure

• Begin by determining how many bonds the molecule contains.

Page 22: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Number of bonds

• Add the total number of valence electrons needed by the atoms in the molecule.

Page 23: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Number of bonds

• Add the total number of valence electrons needed by the atoms in the molecule.

Example: CO2

Page 24: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Number of bonds

• Add the total number of valence electrons needed by the atoms in the molecule.

Example: CO2

carbon needs 4 electrons

Page 25: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Number of bonds

• Add the total number of valence electrons needed by the atoms in the molecule.

Example: CO2

carbon needs 4 electrons

each oxygen atom needs 2 electrons

Page 26: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Number of bonds

• Add the total number of valence electrons needed by the atoms in the molecule.

Example: CO2

carbon needs 4 electrons

each oxygen atom needs 2 electrons

4 + 2 + 2 = 8 valence electrons needed

Page 27: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Number of bonds

• Add the total number of valence electrons needed by the atoms in the molecule.

Example: CO2

carbon needs 4 electrons

each oxygen atom needs 2

4 + 2 + 2 = 8 valence electrons needed

• Divide the total by 2 (8 / 2 = 4 bonds)

Page 28: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Drawing a Lewis structure

• Begin by determining how many bonds the molecule contains.

• Connect the atoms with lines representing the bonds. Make it symmetrical if possible.

Page 29: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

In this case, placing carbon in the middle with double bonds between

the carbon and each oxygen makes it symmetrical.

O = C = O

Page 30: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Drawing a Lewis structure

• Begin by determining how many bonds the molecule contains.

• Connect the atoms with lines representing the bonds. Make it symmetrical if possible.

• Finally, add any unshared valence electrons as pairs of dots.

Page 31: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Oxygen: 6 valence electrons, two of which are shared, 4 unshared electrons.

Page 32: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Oxygen: 6 valence electrons, two of which are shared, 4 unshared electrons.

Carbon: 4 valence electrons, all of them are shared, 0 unshared electrons.

Page 33: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Analyzing the structure

• At least one of two things in a Lewis structure will make it polar…

Page 34: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Analyzing the structure

• At least one of two things in a Lewis structure will make it polar…

1) the molecule is not symmetrical

Page 35: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Analyzing the structure

• At least one of two things in a Lewis structure will make it polar…

1) the molecule is not symmetrical

2) unshared electrons on the central atom

Page 36: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Analyzing the structure

• At least one of two things in a Lewis structure will make it polar…

1) the molecule is not symmetrical

2) unshared electrons on the central atom

• If neither of the above are true, the molecule is nonpolar.

Page 37: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

CO2 is nonpolar, because the molecule is symmetrical and

there are no unshared electrons on the central atom.

Page 38: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

Page 39: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

• First, we must check the difference in electronegativity between H and O.

Page 40: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

• First, we must check the difference in electronegativity between H and O.

3.44 – 2.20 = 1.24 (a Lewis structure will be needed)

Page 41: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

• First, we must check the difference in electronegativity between H and O.

3.44 – 2.20 = 1.24 (a Lewis structure will be needed)

• Calculate the number of bonds.

Page 42: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

• First, we must check the difference in electronegativity between H and O.

3.44 – 2.20 = 1.24 (a Lewis structure will be needed)

• Calculate the number of bonds.

each H needs 1 electron, O needs 2 electrons

4 / 2 = 2 bonds

Page 43: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

• Try to draw a symmetrical molecule containing 2 bonds.

H – O – H

Page 44: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

• Try to draw a symmetrical molecule containing 2 bonds.

• Add dots for any unshared valence electrons.

hydrogen, 1 valence electron, 1 shared electron

oxygen, 6 valence electrons, 2 shared electrons

Page 45: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is H2O polar or nonpolar?

Even though the molecule is symmetrical, there are unshared electrons on the central atom (O)

making water a polar molecule.

Page 46: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PF3 polar or nonpolar?

Page 47: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference of 1.79, a Lewis structure is needed.

Page 48: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference of 1.79, a Lewis structure is needed.

• 3 bonds

Page 49: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference of 1.79, a Lewis structure is needed.

• 3 bonds

• 2 unshared electrons on P, 6 unshared electrons on each F.

• Molecule is polar.

Page 50: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is AsH3 polar or nonpolar?

Page 51: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is AsH3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference of 0.02, molecule is nonpolar.

Page 52: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is SO2 polar or nonpolar?

Page 53: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is SO2 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference is 0.86, a Lewis structure is needed.

Page 54: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is SO2 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference is 0.86, a Lewis structure is needed.

• 3 bonds

O – S = O

Page 55: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is SO2 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference is 0.86, a Lewis structure is needed.

• 3 bonds

O – S = O

Page 56: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is SO2 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference is 0.86, a Lewis structure is needed.

• 3 bonds

• add the unshared electrons

O – S = OWhen two electrons are left unpaired, one of

them must be moved.

Page 57: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is SO2 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference is 0.86, a Lewis structure is needed.

• 3 bonds

• add the unshared electrons

O – S = OAlways move the electron to the more

electronegative element.

Page 58: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PCl5 polar or nonpolar?

Page 59: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PCl5 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference tells us a Lewis structure will be needed.

Page 60: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PCl5 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference tells us a Lewis structure will be needed.

• With a total of 8 electrons needed, we calculate 4 bonds are present, but 4 bonds are not enough.

Page 61: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is PCl5 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference tells us a Lewis structure will be needed.

• With a total of 8 electrons needed, we calculate 4 bonds are present, but 4 bonds are not enough.

• When this happens, you will only have single bonds and you use the minimum number of bonds possible (5 in this case).

Page 62: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Structures such as this require an expanded octet, meaning the central

atom ends up with more than 8 valence electrons.

Page 63: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Unshared electrons are distributed just like in a regular Lewis structure.

Page 64: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Unshared electrons are distributed just like in a regular Lewis structure.

This molecule is nonpolar.

Page 65: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?

Page 66: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference indicates that a Lewis structure is needed.

Page 67: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference indicates that a Lewis structure is needed.

• With 8 electrons needed, 4 bonds should be needed.

Page 68: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Electronegativity difference indicates that a Lewis structure is needed.

• With 8 electrons needed, 4 bonds should be needed.

Page 69: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Boron should be involved in all 4 bonds, but it only has 3 valence electrons to donate. Only 3 bonds can exist in this molecule.

Page 70: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?

• Molecules in which boron is the central atom will have an incomplete octet for the boron.

Page 71: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine

Is BF3 polar or nonpolar?• Molecules in which boron is the central

atom will have an incomplete octet for the boron.

• This molecule is nonpolar.

Page 72: Standard 3.2 Covalent Compounds. Everybody on the left side of the room will be an atom of sulfur. Everybody on the right side of the room will be fluorine