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AP Chemistry Chapters 9
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Vocab (Ch 9) VSEPR- Valence Shell e- Pair Repulsion bonding pair non bonding pair – lone pair of electrons electron domain – regions around a central atom where e- are likely to be found. molecular geometry- the arrangement of atoms in space electron domain geometry- the arrangement of e- domains about the central atom of a molecule The Molecular geometry is a derivation of the Electron-Domain geometry See Table 9.2 (page 309)
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Electron Domains The e- in a multiple bond constitute a single e- domain. # of e- domains = (# of atoms bonded to the central atom) + (# of non bonding pairs on the central atom) Page 306
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Molecular Shapes Website See VSEPR table handout for molecular shapes http://www.molecules.org/VSEPR_table.html See B& L page 307-309
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Effect of Non bonding e- and multiple bonds on Bond Angles e- domains for non-bonding e- pairs exert greater repulsive forces on adjacent e- domains and thus tend to compress the bond angles e- domains for multiple bonds exert a greater repulsive force on adjacent e- domains than do single bonds. Page 310
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Molecules with Expanded Valence Shells These shapes generally contain axial and equatorial positions See B&L pg. 312 Variations of the trigonal bipyramidal shape show lone electron pairs in the equatorial position Variations of the octahedral shape show lone electron pairs in the axial positions Page 311
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Molecules With More Than One Central Atom You can use the VSEPR theory for molecules with more than one central atom, such as, CH 3 NH 2. Pages 313-314
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Bond Polarity Bond Polarity is a measure of how equally the e- in a bond are shared between the 2 atoms of the bond. Polarity is used when talking about covalently bonded molecules. If the molecule has only 2 different atoms, such as, HF or CCl 4 you can calculate the electronegativity difference and determine the type of covalent bond (polar or non- polar).
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Polarity and Bond Type Electronegativity Difference Bonding Type <0.5Non-polar covalent 0.5 – 1.9Polar covalent > 2.0ionic
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Dipole Moment Dipole Moment – the measure of the amount of charge separation in the molecule. For a molecule with more than 2 atoms, the dipole moment depends on both the polarities of the individual bonds and the geometry of the molecule. The overall dipole moment of a polyatomic molecule is the sum of its bond dipoles. See B&L page 315 figure 9.9
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Dipole Moment For each bond in the molecule, consider the bond dipole (the dipole moment due only to the 2 atoms in that bond) The dipole “arrow” should point toward the more electronegative atom in the bond The overall dipole moment of a polyatomic molecule is the sum of its bond dipoles. (Consider the magnitude and direction of the bond dipoles)
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Different Theories VSEPR Theory (using Lewis Dot Structures) Valence Bond Theory (using hybridization) Molecular Orbital Theory (shows allowed states for e - in molecules) Go to the following web-site for a compare and contrasting of the 3 different theories http://www.chem.ufl.edu/~chm2040/Notes/Chapter_12/theory. html http://www.chem.ufl.edu/~chm2040/Notes/Chapter_12/theory. html
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sp Hybrid Orbitals See section 9.5 pages 318-320
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sp 2 and sp 3 Hybrid Orbitals See section 9.5 pages 320-322
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d Orbital Hybridization See section 9.5 pages 322
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Multiple Bonds and Hybridization See section 9.6 pages 324-326
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Delocalized π Bonding See section 9.6 pages 327-330
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Sigma Bonds ( σ ) Sigma bonds occur when the e- density is concentrated between the 2 nuclei. These are single covalent bonds. Sigma bonds can form from the overlap of an s orbital with another s orbital, an s orbital with a p orbital, or a p orbital with a p orbital.
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Pi Bonds ( π ) Overlap of 2 “p” orbitals oriented perpendicularly to the inter-nuclear axis This overlap results in the sharing of electrons. The shared electron pair of a pi bond occupies the space above and below the line that represents where the two atoms are joined together.
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Hybridization An atom in a molecule may adopt a different set of atomic orbitals (called hybrid orbitals) than those it has in the free state. See B&L pages 319-322 for explanation and diagrams of electron promotion
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Multiple Bond A multiple bond consists of one sigma bond and at least one pi bond. A double bond consists of one sigma bond and one pi bond. A triple bond consists of one sigma bond and two pi bonds. A pi bond always accompanies a sigma bond when forming double and triple bonds.
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Sigma and Pi Most of the bonding that you have seen so far has bonding e- that are localized. σ and π bonds are associated with the 2 atoms that form the bond (and NO other atoms) Delocalized bonding can occur in molecules that have π bonds and more than one resonance structure.
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Molecular Orbital Diagram Energy Level Diagram (Molecular Orbital Diagram) The H 2 molecule is the easiest molecule to plot on the molecular orbital diagram Whenever 2 atomic orbitals overlap, 2 molecular orbitals form (one is a bonding orbital and one is an anti- bonding orbital). This is not on the AP exam
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Paramagnetism Molecules with one or more unpaired electrons are attracted into a magnetic field The more unpaired electrons in species, the stronger the force of attraction This behavior is called paramagnetism
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Diamagnetism Substances with no unpaired electrons are weakly repelled from a magnetic field This property is called diamagnetism Diamagnetism is much weaker than paramagnetism
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Problems to Try Ch 9 # 5-13, 15, 23, 27, 31, 32, 34, 40, 43, 44 (a and c), 63 AP Exam Problems to Try 1999 # 8 2000 # 7 (last section) 2002 # 6 2003 # 8 2004 # 7 & # 8
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