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Chemistry Unit 4 Chapter 8
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Molecule A neutral group of atoms joined together by covalent bonds Molecular Compound Tend to have lower melting and boiling points than ionic compounds Covalent Bond Sharing of electrons between two or more nonmetals Between molecules, acids, and polyatomic ions
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Molecular Formulas Represents how many atoms of each element are in the compound Cannot be determined by the criss-cross method – why? Can be determined by creating a structural (Lewis dot) formula Octet Rule Atoms still tend to attain the electron configuration for a noble gas by sharing electrons
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Structural Formula Shows the arrangement of covalently bonded atoms using (dashes) as bonds (shared electrons) and (dots) as unshared electrons Example – Hydrogen H + H H H (Lewis Dot Structure) Creates an electron configuration of Helium (noble gas) for both hydrogens by sharing the electrons H H (Structural Formula) Shared electrons represented by a dash
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Drawing Structural Formulas Steps 1) Count the total number of valence electrons for the compound ex. CH 4 (methane) C = 4 e - × 1 atom = 4 H = 1 e - × 4 atoms = 4 Total = 8 electrons
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Drawing Structural Formulas Steps 2) Arrange the atoms Hydrogen is NEVER in the middle Carbon is ALWAYS in the middle Elements with only one atom are typically in the middle ex. CH 4 (methane) H H C H H
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Drawing Structural Formulas Steps 3) Fill in electrons, starting around the central atom(s) until all your valence electrons are used. ex. CH 4 (methane) H H C H H
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Drawing Structural Formulas Steps 4) Draw lines (dashes) for any shared electron pairs and leave all unshared electrons where they are. ex. CH 4 (methane) H H C H H
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Drawing Structural Formulas Now Try These H2OH2O F2F2 NH 3
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Single Bond Two atoms held together by sharing 2 electrons (1 pair) Double Bond Two atoms held together by sharing 4 electrons (2 pairs) Triple Bond Two atoms held together by sharing 6 electrons (3 pairs) Double and triple bonds NEVER form with Hydrogen or the Halogens!!
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Examples Double and triple bonds are needed sometimes to satisfy the octet rule for all the atoms in the compound.
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Molecular Shape Compounds are THREE-DIMENTIONAL VSEPR Valence-Shell Electron-Pair Repulsion Theory The negative charge on electrons repel each other creating molecular shapes where the electrons are as far away from each other as possible. Tetrahedral Angle – 109.5 ⁰ The shape where all the electron pairs are as far apart as possible
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Common Shapes Linear – two atoms or two double bonds Trigonal Planar Must have one double bond Bent Pyramidal Tetrahedral
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