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Shapes of Molecules & Intermolecular Forces
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Shapes of covalent molecules
VSEPR – Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Use this to predict shapes of covalent molecules Count number of bond pairs and lone pairs Predict shape
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2 180 3 120 4 109.5 1 107 104.5 Linear BeCl2 BeH2 Triangular planar
No. electron pairs: No. bond pairs: No. lone pairs: Shape molecule: Bond angle: Examples: 2 Linear 180 BeCl2 BeH2 3 Triangular planar 120 BCl3 AlH3 4 Tetrahedral 109.5 CH4 SiCl4 1 Pyramidal 107 NH3 PH3 V-shaped 104.5 H2O H2S
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BeCl2 Be in Group II – 2 e-’s in outer shell
Cl in Group VII – 7 e-’s in outer shell 2 bond pairs & 0 lone pairs Linear Cl Be Cl 1800
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BCl3 B in Group III – 3 e-’s in outer shell
Cl in Group VII – 7 e-’s in outer shell 3 bond pairs & 0 lone pairs Triangular planar Cl 1200 B Cl Cl
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CH4 C in Group IV – 4 e-’s in outer shell
H in Group I – 1 e- in outer shell 4 bond pairs & 0 lone pairs Tetrahedral H 109.50 H C H
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NH3 N in Group V – 5 e-’s in outer shell
H in Group I – 1 e- in outer shell 3 bond pairs & 1 lone pair Pyramidal N 1070 H H H
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H2O H in Group I – 1 e- in outer shell
O in Group VI – 6 e-’s in outer shell 2 bond pairs & 2 lone pairs V-shaped O H H
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Ionic & Covalent Characteristics
Network of ions in a crystal Individual molecules Usually hard & brittle (metals) Usually soft (non-metals) High melting & boiling points (mainly solids) Low melting & boiling points (mainly liquids & gases) Solid at room T Liquid or gas at room T Conduct electricity when molten or dissolved in water Do not conduct electricity
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Intramolecular bonding
Occurs between ions in ionic compounds Hold ions together within molecules or crystal lattices Example – sodium chloride (NaCl)
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Intermolecular forces
Forces of attraction between covalent molecules 3 types – van der Waals, dipole-dipole & hydrogen bonds When these forces are strong molecules are attracted to each other and form solids or liquids
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Van der Waals forces Weakest intermolecular force
Exist between neutral atoms As electrons move within atoms temporary dipoles can occur
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Opposite ends of these temporary dipoles attract each other
Temporary so not very strong +H – H H – H- +H – H-
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Dipole-dipole forces Stronger than van der Waals
In polar molecules the positive pole of one molecule is attracted to the negative pole of another Permanent dipoles so quite strong
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+H – Cl H – Cl- +H – Cl-
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Hydrogen bonding Strongest intermolecular force
When a H atom is bonded to small strongly electronegative atoms like N, O or F it gains a partial positive charge This positive H atom is then attracted to the negative poles in other molecules forming a hydrogen bond
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Strength of intermolecular forces:
H – C – C H+ -O – H O H H+ Strength of intermolecular forces: Van der Waals < dipole-dipole < hydrogen bonds
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Boiling Points Boiling points are increased when there are intermolecular forces present Examples – (a) H2 and O2: Both molecules are non-polar so can only have van der Waals forces O2 has higher b.p. because its heavier +H – H+ -O == O- Mr = 2 Mr = 16
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(b) C2H4 and HCHO: C2H4 is non-polar so can only have van der Waals forces HCHO has a C == O bond so is polar so can have dipole-dipole forces
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+H H O- C C +H – C +H H H+ non-polar polar Dipole-dipole forces are stronger than van der Waals so HCHO will have a higher boiling point
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(c) H2O and H2S: H2O has a polar O --- H bond and O is strongly electronegative so can form hydrogen bonds H2S has a polar S --- H bond but S is not very electronegative so can only form dipole-dipole forces and not hydrogen bonds
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O S H H H H O = S = 2.5 Hydrogen bonds are stronger than dipole-dipole forces so H2O will have a higher boiling point
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