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Chemical Bonding & Electronegativity

Atoms bond to lower their vibrational energy (complete an octet)

Electronegativity is the tendency of an atom’s nucleus to attract electrons in a covalent bond

VSEPR--- Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion

Dipoles have partial charges

“Like dissolves like”


Types of Bonds

Covalent

  • shared electrons

  • polar--- charge is shared unevenly (creates dipoles)

  • nonpolar--- charge is shared evenly

  • low melting point, non-conductor, particles are called molecules

  • Ex: H2O

Ionic

  • transferred electrons

  • 2 ions with opposite charges (Electrostatic Attractions)

  • high melting point, conductor when melted/dissolved (non-conductor when solid), particles are called formula units

  • Ex: NaCl

Metallic

  • delocalized electron “sea”

  • metallic properties stay (conductivity, luster, malleability, high melting point)

Octet Rule

  • Hydrogen--- 2 electrons stabilize

  • Beryllium--- 4 electrons stabilize

  • Boron & Aluminum--- 6 electrons stabilize

  • Elements larger than aluminum can share >8 electrons (empty d-orbital)

  • C, Si, & O can double/triple bond

Element

Bonds formed

Lone pairs

Hydrogen

1

0

Fluorine

1

3

Oxygen

2

2

Nitrogen

3

1

Carbon

4

0

Intramolecular forces

London Dispersion Forces

  • caused by momentary polarization of electron clouds

  • instantaneous dipole induces a dipole on a nearby molecule

  • short-range, between nonpolar molecules

Dipole-Dipole Forces

  • positive dipole aligns with negative dipole

  • increased strength with increased polarity

  • molecules must be close together and polar

LDF + dipole-diple = van der Waals

Hydrogen Bonding

  • hydrogen covalently bonds to a negative element with a lone pair

  • other element must be oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine

  • causes surface tension

Bond Strength

metallic

ionic & covalent

hydrogen

dipole-dipole

LDF

H

Chemical Bonding & Electronegativity

Atoms bond to lower their vibrational energy (complete an octet)

Electronegativity is the tendency of an atom’s nucleus to attract electrons in a covalent bond

VSEPR--- Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion

Dipoles have partial charges

“Like dissolves like”


Types of Bonds

Covalent

  • shared electrons

  • polar--- charge is shared unevenly (creates dipoles)

  • nonpolar--- charge is shared evenly

  • low melting point, non-conductor, particles are called molecules

  • Ex: H2O

Ionic

  • transferred electrons

  • 2 ions with opposite charges (Electrostatic Attractions)

  • high melting point, conductor when melted/dissolved (non-conductor when solid), particles are called formula units

  • Ex: NaCl

Metallic

  • delocalized electron “sea”

  • metallic properties stay (conductivity, luster, malleability, high melting point)

Octet Rule

  • Hydrogen--- 2 electrons stabilize

  • Beryllium--- 4 electrons stabilize

  • Boron & Aluminum--- 6 electrons stabilize

  • Elements larger than aluminum can share >8 electrons (empty d-orbital)

  • C, Si, & O can double/triple bond

Element

Bonds formed

Lone pairs

Hydrogen

1

0

Fluorine

1

3

Oxygen

2

2

Nitrogen

3

1

Carbon

4

0

Intramolecular forces

London Dispersion Forces

  • caused by momentary polarization of electron clouds

  • instantaneous dipole induces a dipole on a nearby molecule

  • short-range, between nonpolar molecules

Dipole-Dipole Forces

  • positive dipole aligns with negative dipole

  • increased strength with increased polarity

  • molecules must be close together and polar

LDF + dipole-diple = van der Waals

Hydrogen Bonding

  • hydrogen covalently bonds to a negative element with a lone pair

  • other element must be oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine

  • causes surface tension

Bond Strength

metallic

ionic & covalent

hydrogen

dipole-dipole

LDF