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1 Electron Dot Diagrams G.N. Lewis idea (UC Berkeley) –Elegantly simple idea, but very instructive –Show each bonding electron as a dot As elements brought together, dots merge Most stable configuration is filled shell –2 dots for Hydrogen (2s 2 or [He] configuration) –8 dots for most others (s 2 +p 6, Octet rule) Methane example C(4dot) + 4*H (1dot) –Can have more electron pairs than bonds “lone pairs” are non-bonding electrons Lone pairs occupy a geometrical position –Are part of molecular shape consideration
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2 Rules of Lewis-Dot diagrams Only “valence electrons” considered –Inner core (noble gas configs.) ignored They play no part in chemical reactions –Octet rule applies for >90% of atoms Hydrogen is main exception with 2 electrons A few other exceptions –Starting point is an element’s electrons Pure element where electrons = protons Not elements in oxidized or reduced state “AE” or “Available Electrons”
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3 Rules of Lewis-Dot diagrams Electron Counting –Add up electrons in all elements involved If product is an ion, must add or subtract electrons Sulfur (6) + 2 oxygens (6) = 3*6=18 electrons All require 8 shared electrons 3*8=24 Sharing is 24-18=6 –Each electron is a dot, each pair CAN be a line Dot plot must meet all the rules (one of these 2 does NOT)
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4 Octet Rule 2 electrons per outer shell for Hydrogen –Hydrogen starts out with single electron - 1s –Diatomic hydrogen provides 2 shared electrons 8 electron outer shell for most elements –Some gain electrons, such as Cl(7e) to Cl - (8e) –Others lose electrons, as Na(11e) to Na + (10e) Polyatomic Ions share 8 electrons/element –Nitrate, sulfate, phosphate, etc.
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5 Diatomic Hydrogen Formation of H 2 via sharing 2 outer electrons, emulating He
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6 Lewis Structure (electron dot diagram) for ammonia Each of the 3 hydrogen atoms will share its electron with nitrogen to form a bonding pair of electrons (covalent bond) so that each hydrogen atom has a share in 2 valence electrons (electronic configuration of helium) and the nitrogen has a share in 8 valence electrons (electron configuration of neon)
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8 Lone Pair in Ammonia NH 3 has 8 electrons around the N = ok! NH 3 has 2 electrons around each H = ok! –Fits the octet and 2 electron rules What happens to 2 unbonded N electrons ? –3 of 5 AE are bonded, 2 are “leftovers” –These 2 are “lone pairs” Fulfills the electrical requirements Non-bonding, help define shape due to repulsion
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9 Lone Pairs Having more electrons than bonds = leftover “lone pair” –Ammonia example Nitrogen (5 electrons to share) Hydrogen (total of 3 electrons to share) After N-H Bonding, 2 nitrogen electrons “left over” –Lone pairs They complete octets of 8 electrons per element They are part of electronic structure They are NOT part of molecular structure
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10 3 of Nitrogen’s 5 valence electrons shared with 3 Hydrogen atoms in Ammonia. “Lone Pair” electrons attract Hydrogen ion Result is formation of the Ammonium ion
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11 Each oxygen will share 2 of its valence electrons in order to form 2 bonding pairs of electrons (a double covalent bond) so that each oxygen will have a share in 8 valence electrons (electronic configuration of neon). Lewis Structure (electron dot diagram) for the oxygen molecule
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13 Examples across the chart
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14 Electronic Configurations of Elements
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15 Nitrate Formation from elements 1 additional electron needed to fill shells, meeting octet rule provides (-1) charge to anion
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16 Alternative Nitrate Representations “Ball & Stick” easy to model and understand “Bubbles” represent electron clouds, size
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17 Sulfate Formation from elements 2 additional electrons needed to fill shells, meeting octet rule provides (-2) charge to anion
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18 Electron Dot Diagrams Lines between atoms are 2-electrons –One line equivalent to 2 dots 2 lines (double bond) equivalent to 4 dots 3 lines (triple bond) equivalent to 6 dots –Can rotate around one line (no interference) 2 lines (double bond) restricts rotation, planar 3 lines (triple bond), no rotation, linear
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19 (Almost) all bonding can be represented by lines and dots
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20 Each of 4 carbon valence electrons shares orbitals with 1 from Chlorine
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21 Important Exception Ionic bonds electron transfer –Each ion is free agent, unattached to the other If not shared, no “double counting” possible –Na + Cl NaCl(s) Na + + Cl - –Ions are “Isoelectronic” with [Ne] and [Ar] Core looks like noble gas, but net charge on ions –A similar question in the experiment Metal halides and oxides generally not covalent
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22 Lewis Diagram for Chloride Ion
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23 Lewis diagram for Sodium Ion
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