Section 5.4—Polarity of Molecules

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MOLECULAR SHAPE HOW DOES SHAPE AND POLARITY DETERMINE FUNCTION AND PROPERTIES OF MOLECULES?
Advertisements

Polarity and Intermolecular Forces Molecular Geometry.
Polarity of Molecules Michael J. Foster C.W. Baker High School Baldwinsville, NY.
Chapter 10 Properties of Solids and Liquids
Molecular Polarity AP Chemistry.
POLAR BONDS AND MOLECULES Ms. Withrow November 10, 2008.
Section 5.4—Polarity of Molecules. Two atoms sharing equally: Draw N 2 N N Each nitrogen atom has an electronegativity of 3.0 They pull evenly on the.
Section 5.4—Polarity of Molecules
Aim: What are polar bonds and polar molecules?
Polarity of Molecules 11/18/14 Polar Molecules are molecules which have an uneven distribution of charge. One side of the molecule is negative while.
1 Electronegativity? The ability of an atom in a molecule to attract shared electrons to itself. The ability of an atom in a molecule to attract shared.
Polarity and IMF. Polar Bonds When the atoms in a bond are the same, the electrons are shared equally. This is a nonpolar covalent bond. When two different.
1 Molecular Polarity. 2 Polar Molecules Polar molecules are molecules that have a slightly positive end or pole and a slightly negative end or pole. The.
Section 5.4—Polarity of Molecules
Polarity of Molecules. Electronegativity The pull an atom has for the electrons it shares with another atom in a bond. Electronegativity is a periodic.
Polar Bonds and Molecules Chapter 8.4. Learning Objectives Be able to use electronegativity to identify polar vs. non-polar covalent bond Draw correct.
  In covalent bonding, the two electrons shared by the atoms are attracted to the nucleus of both atoms. Neither atom completely loses or gains electrons.
Chemical Bonding and Molecular Structure Chapter 12 Sec
Chemistry Brodersen 2013/2014. Polarity in a molecules determines whether or not electrons in that molecule are shared equally. When determining the polarity.
IIIIII II. Molecular Geometry Ch. 9 – Molecular Structure.
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory –Electron pairs orient themselves in order to minimize repulsive forces.
Aim: What are polar bonds and polar molecules? Polar and Nonpolar Bonds There are two types of covalent bonds Nonpolar Covalent Bonds (equal share of.
Ionic & Covalent Bonding Electronegativity & Polarity.
Warmup VSEPR Review VSEPR Review Text pg 56 # 1-10 Text pg 56 # 1-10 You may work with a partner, if you wish. You may work with a partner, if you wish.
V alence S hell E lectron P air R epulsion Theory Planar triangular Tetrahedral Trigonal pyramidal Bent.
Ionic, Covalent, and Metallic Bonding
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory
Polarity and Intermolecular Forces
Molecular Compounds Polarity.
Chapter 6 The Shape of Molecules.
Molecular Polarity AP Chemistry.
COVALENT BONDING.
Chapter 14 Covalent bonding.
Polarity of Molecules 301 Chemistry.
Polar Bonds and Molecules Chapter 8.4
Chapter 6 The Shape of Molecules.
Electronegativity and Forces
Chapter 10 Properties of Solids and Liquids
Section 5.5—Intermolecular Forces
Intermolecular Forces: relationships between molecules
Homonuclear & Heteronuclear bonds
POLARITY.
Polar vs. Non-Polar Molecules
Polarity and Intermolecular Forces
2.4 Polar Covalent Bonds Unequal Sharing
Section 5.4—Polarity of Molecules
Section 5.1—Types of Bonds
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory
Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds
VSEPR Model and the Resulting Shapes
Molecular Polarity Chemistry.
Polarity of Molecules October 2016.
Molecular Geometry.
Chemical Bonds Chemistry Chapter 6.
H2O.
Essential Question: What are polar bonds and polar molecules?
Although all covalent bonds involve a sharing of one or more pairs of electrons between bonding atoms, most of the time this sharing is not equal. One.
What are polar bonds and polar molecules?
Molecular Structure and Shape
Types of covalent bonds
Ch 7.2 Polarity and VSEPR Theory
Structure & Properties of Matter
Day 1 Quiz Today ! Pick up papers on the lab table.
IONIC BONDING.
Polar & non-polar covalent bonds
Covalent Bonding …electrons are shared.
Polar versus Nonpolar.
Exercise: Predicting shapes of molecules
VSEPR Theory Atoms in a molecule try to spread out from one another as much as possible.
BOND & polarity.
Presentation transcript:

Section 5.4—Polarity of Molecules

Electronegativity The pull an atom has for the electrons it shares with another atom in a bond. Electronegativity is a periodic trend As atomic radius increases and number of electron shells increases, the nucleus of an atom has less of a pull on its outermost electrons

Periodic Table with Electronegativies increases decreases

Polar Bond A polar covalent bond is when there is a partial separation of charge One atom pulls the electrons closer to itself and has a partial negative charge. The atom that has the electrons farther away has a partial positive charge

Two atoms sharing equally Each nitrogen atom has an electronegativity of 3.0 They pull evenly on the shared electrons The electrons are not closer to one or the other of the atoms This is a non-polar covalent bond

Atoms sharing almost equally C H Electronegativities: H = 2.1 C = 2.5 The carbon pulls on the electrons slightly more, pulling them slightly towards the carbon Put the difference isn’t enough to create a polar bond This is a non-polar covalent bond

C O H Sharing unevenly Electronegativities: H = 2.1 C = 2.5 O = 3.5 The carbon-hydrogen difference isn’t great enough to create partial charges But the oxygen atoms pulls significantly harder on the electrons than the carbon does. This does create a polar covalent bond This is a polar covalent bond

Showing Partial Charges There are two ways to show the partial separation of charges Use of “” for “partial” Use of an arrow pointing towards the partial negative atom with a “plus” tail at the partial positive atom C O H + - C O H

Ionic Bonds Ionic bonds occur when the electronegativies of two atoms are so different that they can’t even share unevenly…one atom just takes them from the other

How to determine bond type Find the electronegativies of the two atoms in the bond Find the absolute value of the difference of their values If the difference is 0.4 or less, it’s a non-polar covalent bond If the difference is greater than 0.4 but less than 1.4, it’s a polar covalent bond If the difference is greater than 1.4, it’s an ionic bond

If the bond is polar, draw the polarity arrow Let’s Practice C – H O—Cl F—F C—Cl Example: If the bond is polar, draw the polarity arrow

If the bond is polar, draw the polarity arrow Let’s Practice C – H O—Cl F—F C—Cl 2.5 – 2.1 = 0.4 non-polar 3.5 – 3.0 = 0.5 polar 4.0 – 4.0 = 0.0 non-polar 2.5 – 3.0 = - 0.5 polar Example: If the bond is polar, draw the polarity arrow

Polar Bonds versus Polar Molecules Not every molecule with a polar bond is polar itself If the polar bonds cancel out then the molecule is overall non-polar. The polar bonds cancel out. No net dipole The polar bonds do not cancel out. Net dipole

The Importance of VSEPR You must think about a molecule in 3-D (according to VSEPR theory) to determine if it is polar or not! Water drawn this way shows all the polar bonds canceling out. O H H But water drawn in the correct VSEPR structure, bent, shows the polar bonds don’t cancel out! Net dipole H O H

Let’s Practice Example: Is NH3 a polar molecule?

Let’s Practice N H Example: Is NH3 a polar molecule? Electronegativities: N = 3.0 H = 2.1 Difference = 0.9 Polar bonds VSEPR shape = Trigonal pyramidal Yes, NH3 is polar Net dipole