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Basic Terminology Molecule Group of atoms held together by covalent bonds Bond Length Distance between 2 bonded atoms Bond Energy Energy required/needed to break a chemical bond Bond Angles Determined based on bonding and nonbonding regions of the central atom in a molecule
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Molecular Shape 3-D structure of a molecule Predicted from the Lewis dot diagram of a chemical compound Influenced by the number of valence electron pairs AND number of electrons existing as bonded or lone pairs. Exact shape experimentally determined Vital characteristic of a chemical compound
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Valence-Shell Electron-Pair Repulsion(“VSEPR”) Method Also called “Electron-Domain Model” Valence electrons repel each other in chemical bond Valence electron pairs are arranged so the distance between them is MAXIMIZED ! Valence electron pair number (bonded vs. lone) Influence atom arrangement around central atom Indirect influence on shape Focus on central atom Shared electrons Unshared electrons
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Based on electron pair domains Bonding Domains 2 atoms share domain Electrons are shared within domain Nonbonding Domains Domain only exists within valence shell of an individual atom Electrons are not shared ***Molecular structures attempt to keep bonding domains as far apart as possible*** VSEPR or Electron- Domain Model (cont.)
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What about unshared electrons on the central atom? Lone/unshared electrons Occupy space around central atom Not involved in chemical bonding between atoms These pairs are NOT taken into account for a chemical molecule’s shape ! Require MORE space than shared electrons, indirect contribution to shape
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Group of valence electrons “hanging out” around central atom, orientation around central atom Describes how electron groups are distributed around central atom Composition: unpaired, lone pair, one/two/three bound pairs Orientations based on electron groups Linear—2 Trigonal planar—3 Tetrahedral—4 Trigonal bipyramidal—5 Octahedral--6 1) Electron Groups
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Describes the atom arrangement around a central atom based on chemical bonds, dealing with BONDED atoms Orientation of BOUND atoms around a central atom Based on electron-group geometry 2) Molecular Geometry
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Central Atom = A Terminal atoms (bonded atoms) = X Lone pair electrons = E Example: Water VSEPR Notation
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1)Draw Lewis structure 2)Identify number of electron groups—bound or lone pair? 1)Determine electron group geometry 2)Figure out molecular geometry How many bonded atoms are around the central atom Is this geometry the same as electron group geometry? How do we draw molecular shapes?
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Table 10.1 (pp. 390-391) Handout
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Molecular geometry = Electron group geometry !!! 1)Linear (AX 2 ) Bond angle = 180° 2 electron groups Examples: MgCl 2, CO 2 No Lone Pair Electrons
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2) Trigonal Planar (AX 3 ) Bond angle = 120° 3 electron groups Ex. BF 3 3) Tetrahedral (AX 4 ) Bond angle = 109. 5° 4 electron groups Ex. CH 4, CCl 4 No Lone Pair Electrons
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4) Trigonal bipyramidal (AX 5 ) 5 electron groups Only seen with expanded valence shell, period 3+ 5) Octahedral (AX 6 ) 6 electron groups Only seen with expanded valence shell, period 3+ **Refer to Table 10.1 pp. 390-391 No Lone Pair Electrons
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1)Trigonal planar with 1 lone pair (AX 2 E) 3 electron groups, one lone pair How many bound atoms? Bond angle= 120° Known as “angular” Ex. SO 2 Lone Pair Electrons Present
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2) Tetrahedral with 1 lone pair (AX 3 E) 4 electron groups (3 pairs, 1 lone pair) How many bound atoms? Known as “trigonal pyramidal” Bond angle = 109.5°, 107°(actual) Ex. NH 3 Lone Pair Electrons Present
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2) Tetrahedral with 2 lone pair (AX 2 E 2 ) 4 electron groups (2 pairs, 2 lone pair) How many bound atoms? Known as “angular/bent” Bond angle ≈ 104/105° Ex. H 2 O Lone Pair Electrons Present
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More than one central atoms is present Figure out molecular geometry for each central atom Combine BOTH geometries together to get the overall shape Ex. HNO 3 Complex Molecules
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1) Repulsion between electron groups increases as the groups’ distance decreases. 2) Lone pair electrons have more repulsion than bonded electrons. Charge can spread Need more space in shape VSEPR Method “Take Home” Points
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Homework Read pp. 387-398 Problems p. 382 #59-60 p.427 #21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 30
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