Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon CHAPTER 9 - CHEMICAL BONDS LEWIS STRUCTURE - How atoms are connected together. LEWIS STRUCTURE FOR ELEMENTS – Valence electrons are represented as dots surrounding the symbol of an element. To write a Lewis Structure for an element: 1. Determine # of valence electrons Example: Fluorine F electron configuration 1s22s22p5 (outer shell has 7 e-) Group # is equal to valence electrons (for main group elements, except helium: 2 electrons) 2. Draw dots around element symbol to represent valence electrons. Draw a maximum of 2 dots per side. .. :F: The maximum valence electrons is 8 (an octet). Write the Lewis structure for Magnesium Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon COVALENT BONDS Two atoms share a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond. H. i.e. hydrogen H. H. H ..H H2 same as helium 1s2 1s2 i.e. chlorine, Cl2 .. .. :Cl: + :Cl: [Ne]3s23p5 .. .. :Cl . . Cl: [Ne] 3s23p6 (octet) Bonding Electrons – electrons shared between atoms represent a covalent bond. Bonding electrons are drawn as a line between atoms. Lone Pair Electrons - Non-bonding electrons, located on only one atom. Bonding pair i.e. H-H .. .. :Cl – Cl: Lone pair Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon Double and Triple bonds Double Bond: 2 electron pairs are shared between atoms (stronger and shorter than single bonds) Example .. .. .. .O=O. Triple Bond: 3 electron pairs are shared between atoms (stronger and shorter than double bonds) Example Rules for Writing Lewis Structures for Covalent Compounds: 1. Write the skeletal structure for the molecule. (hydrogen is always placed around the central atom) (place highest electron affinity (more electronegative) atoms in terminal positions) i.e. H2O H O H Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon 2. Count the total number of electrons for the molecule by adding the valence electrons (VE) for each atom. H. H. :O: Total e- for molecule: 1+1+6 = 8 3. Insert the electrons in the skeletal structure making sure no atom gets no more than eight electrons (octet) (hydrogen gets no more than two electrons: duet). Start with bonding electrons, then lone pairs on terminal atoms, and then lone pairs on the central atom. H :O : H non-bonding pair of electrons (lone pair) H -O - H bonding pair of electrons 4. Form double or triple bonds if atoms do not have eight electrons around them. Chemistry 101 Example: Write the Lewis structure for CO2 1) Write skeletal structure 2) Calculate total # of electrons for molecule 3) Place electrons in skeletal structure 4) Form double or triple bonds, if necessary. Prof. Hammon Chemistry 101 Write the Lewis Structure for carbon monoxide. Prof. Hammon Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon Lewis Structures for Polyatomic Ions 1) Write skeletal structure (i.e. CN-) 2) Calculate total # of electrons for polyatomic ion. Add 1 electron for each negative charge and subtract one electron for each positive charge. 3) Place electrons in skeletal structure 4) Form double or triple bonds, if necessary. 5) Put brackets around Lewis Structure and put charge in upper right corner outside brackets. Write a Lewis structure for the hydroxide ion, OH- Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon EXCEPTIONS TO THE OCTET RULE Expanded Octet – more than 8 electrons around an atom. Elements with atomic number 15 or greater may have more than 8 valence electrons. Same rules + place additional electrons on central atom PCl5 .. :Cl: .. :Cl :Cl: P .. Cl: :Cl: Write a Lewis structure for XeF4 Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon EXCEPTIONS TO THE OCTET RULE (cont.) Incomplete Octet – less than 8 electrons around an atom Boron or Beryllium involved Same rules + deficient electrons on B or Be Write a Lewis structure for BF3 Write a Lewis structure for BeH2 Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon ELECTRONEGATIVITY & BOND POLARITY: Electronegativity: a measure of the ability of an atom to attract electrons to itself within a bond. Example: H2O Oxygen is more electronegative than hydrogen, so it can attract the shared electrons to itself within the bond. Numerical values of electronegativity are assigned to the elements. (Refer to Figure 9.8) Electronegativity increases to the right across the periodic table and decreases down a column. Classifying Compounds based on Electronegativity Differences Nonpolar Covalent Compounds – Electronegativity difference between atoms is 0-0.40. Electrons are evenly shared between atoms resulting in a pure covalent bond. i.e. Cl2 electronegativity difference is 3.0 – 3.0 = 0 Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon Polar Covalent Compounds - Electronegativity difference between atoms is 0.41-1.99. Electrons are not evenly shared between atoms. i.e. HF electronegativity difference is 4.0 – 2.1 = ____ Ionic Compounds - Electronegativity difference between atoms is 2.00+. Electrons are completely transferred between atoms. i.e. NaCl electronegativity difference is ____ – ____ = _____ Electronegativity Difference (EN) 0-0.40 0.41-1.99 ≥ 2.00 Bond Type Covalent Polar Covalent Ionic Classify the bonds between the following atoms as nonpolar covalent, polar covalent or ionic Br - Br Cs - Br P-O Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon RESONANCE & FORMAL CHARGE Resonance Structures: equivalent Lewis structures for the same molecule Drawn with a double headed arrow between equivalent structures. Represent an average between the Lewis Structures. Example SO2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .O=S-O. .O-S=O. Write a Lewis Structure for ozone, O3 including resonance structures. Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon BOND ORDER Bond Order: # of bonds for single, double & triple bonds Type of Bond Single Double Triple Bond Order 1 2 3 For Resonance Structures: Bond Order = Example # of Bonds # of Bonding Situations SO2 .. .. .. .. .. .. .O=S-O. .O-S=O. Bond Order for SO2 = # of bonds / # of bonding sit. = 3 / 2 = ___ What is bond order for CO32-? Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon FORMAL CHARGE Formal charge of an atom is the charge it would have if all bonding electrons were shared equally between the bonded atoms. To determine Formal Charge of an atom: Formal Charge = #VE - #of non-bonding e- -1/2(# of bonding e-) SO42- .. :O: .. :O S 2.. O: :O: To calculate Formal charge on S # valence electron (VE) for S = ____ # of non-bonding electrons on S = ___ # of bonding electrons for S = _____ Formal charge on “S” = ___ – ___ – ½(___) = _____ Calculate the Formal Charge on each “O” in SO42- Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon FORMAL CHARGE (cont.) Formal charge is used to determine the “best” (closest to reality) resonance structure. Rules to pick the “best” structure: 1. Want structure with the smallest total of the absolute values of the formal charge. 2. If total formal charges on structures are equal, then the negative formal charge should be on the more electronegative atom. Which one is the “best” resonance structure for SO42-? .. :O: .. :O S 2.. O: .. :O: ↔ 2- O = S =O :O: :O: To determine: 1) Calculate the formal charge on each atom: 2) Add together the absolute values of all formal charges: /-1/+/-1/+/-1/+/-1/+/+2/ = ___ /-1/+0 +0+/-1/+0 = ____ Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon 3)The one with the smallest total value is the “best” resonance structure. .. :O: ANSWER: 2- O = S =O :O: Which one is the “best” resonance structure? .. :O C = N: ↔ .. .. O=C=N ↔ .. :O = C N: Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon BOND ENERGY Bond Energy is the energy required to break 1 mole of the bond in the gas phase. Breaking bonds requires energy Breaking bonds is an _________________process (H is +). Making bonds is an _________________ process (H is -). Bond Energies vary for polyatomic molecules: C-H Bond breaking H3C-H(g) H3C(g) + H(g) F3C-H(g) F3C(g) + H(g) Br3C-H(g) Br3C(g) + H(g) Bond Energy (kJ/mol) 438 446 402 Ave. Bond Energy: Ave of the bond energies for that bond in numerous compounds (refer to Table 9.3). The larger the bond energy the stronger the bond. Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon Estimating Enthalpy of Reaction (Hrxn) from Bond Energies Hrxn = (H bonds broken ) + (H bonds formed) Example H2(g) + Cl2(g) 2 HCl(g) Bonds Broken Bond En. (H) H-H Cl-Cl 436 kJ/mol 243 kJ/mol Bonds Formed Bond En.(H) H-Cl -431 kJ/mol Hrxn = [1 mol(436kJ/mol) + 1 mol(243 kJ/mol)] + [2 mol(-431 kJ/mol)] Hrxn = Is above reaction exothermic or endothermic? Complete the Diagram Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon Estimate the Hrxn for the following reaction using bond energies: CH4(g) + 2 H2O(g) 4 H2(g) + CO2(g) Hint: To solve draw Lewis Structures & then determine the bonds that are broken and formed. Chemistry 101 Prof. Hammon Bond Enthalpies – The Strength of Covalent Bonds Sharing electrons between atoms is a favorable process, which is why chemical bonds form! Therefore, breaking these bonds will require energy, as shown in the following reaction: Therefore, breaking bonds is an _________________process. Making bonds must is an _________________ process. The value of H for the reaction shown above is called the ____________, which is related to the _______________of the covalent bond. There is a table of average bond energies on page 392 of your text book. Sometimes, Hf° is not known for a compound, and we may not have time to measure this value using calorimetry in a lab. We can use the bond enthalpies to ESTIMATE Hrxn in this case. Hrxn = (Hbonds broken ) – (Hbonds formed) Example: Use Table 9.3 on page 392 to estimate Hrxn for the reaction CH4 (g) + Cl2 (g) CH3Cl (g) + HCl (g) Hrxn = _____________ kJ (book example) What does this equation, Hrxn = (Hbonds broken ) – (Hbonds formed), physically mean? Fill in the Diagram with the enthalpy changes.