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Electronegativity and Polarity Section 9-5
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Electron affinity Tendency of atom to accept electron Usually increases as atomic numbers increase within period Usually decreases as atomic number increases within a group
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Linus Pauling Developed scale of electronegativity Figure 9-15, pg 263 Fluorine has the highest: 3.98 Francium has the lowest: 0.7 Noble gases are not given (0)
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Electron Affinity tells us… Character and type of bond – Never completely ionic or covalent – Sharing is not always completely equal
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Ionic Bond Large differences in electronegativity indicate that electrons are transferred
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Nonpolar covalent bonds Difference in electron affinity of atoms involved is very small Electrons shared fairly equally
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Identical Atoms Difference in electronegativity is 0 Electrons are shared equally.
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Polar Covalent Bonds Unequal sharing Electron tug-of-war Stronger affinity = greater strength
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Differences Less than 0.4 = nonpolar covalent bond 0.4 – 1.7 = polar covalent bond Greater than 1.7 = ionic bond
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Examples: H and Br 2.20 and 2.96 = 0.76 polar covalent C and O 2.55 and 3.44 = 0.89 polar covalent Li and F 0.98 and 3.98 = 3.00 ionic bond
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Solubility of Polar Molecules Like dissolves like – Polar (and ionic) compounds are soluble in polar substances – Nonpolar only soluble in non-polar substances
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Properties of Covalent Compounds Van der Waals forces: weak forces of attraction between individual molecules
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Types of Intermolecular Forces Nonpolar – Weak attraction – Dispersion or induced dipole Polar – Stronger attraction – Dipole-dipole force Hydrogen bond – Very strong – Between H and another dipole
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Physical properties Melting/boiling points lower than ionic Many are gases at room temp Non-conductors of heat or electricity Extremely hard *Due to the intermolecular forces!!
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