CH 11 Molecular Geometries and Bonding Theories
Chapter 11 Goals
- Predict molecular shapes: Utilize VSEPR theory to determine bond angles in molecules & ions.
- Determine molecular polarity: Assess molecules for symmetry and bond polarities to classify as polar or nonpolar.
- Identify hybridization: Recognize the hybridization states of atoms within a molecule.
- Molecular orbital (MO) theory: Construct and utilize energy level diagrams, and write MO configurations for simple molecules/ions.
Valence Shell Electron-Pair Repulsion Theory (VSEPR)
- Concept: Electron density regions (bonding pairs + lone pairs) are spaced apart to minimize repulsion.
- Repulsion strength hierarchy:
- Lone pair to lone pair (strongest)
- Lone pair to bonding pair (intermediate)
- Bonding pair to bonding pair (weakest)
- Mnemonic: lp/lp > lp/bp > bp/bp
- Basic shapes: 5 geometrical arrangements exist depending on the number of regions of electron density around the central atom.
Predicting Molecular Geometries and Bond Angles
- Steps: Count bonding pairs (BP) and lone pairs (LP) around the central atom:
- Each multiple bond or lone pair counts as one region of high electron density.
- Adjust bond angles for presence of lone pairs (angles slightly reduced), except for linear (180°) and square planar (90°).
Table of Geometries and Bond Angles
Regions of Electron Density | Molecule Examples | Geometry | Bond Angle |
---|
2 BP | CO2, CS2, BeCl2 | Linear | 180° |
3 BP (0 LP) | BF3, CO3²⁻ | Trigonal Planar | 120° |
2 BP (1 LP) | SO2, NOCl | Bent | <120° |
4 BP (0 LP) | CH4, NH4⁺, BF4⁻ | Tetrahedral | 109.5° |
4 BP (1 LP) | NH3, H3O⁺ | Trigonal Pyramidal | <109.5° |
5 BP (0 LP) | PF5 | Trigonal Bipyramidal | 120°, 90° |
6 BP (0 LP) | SF6 | Octahedral | 90°, 180° |
Molecular Polarity
- Nonpolar Molecules:
- All bonds are nonpolar.
- Polar bonds present but symmetric molecule causes dipoles to cancel (e.g., BF3).
- Polar Molecules:
- At least one polar bond exists or asymmetric arrangement causes dipoles not to cancel (e.g., H2O, SO2).
- Method:
- Assess bond angle and symmetry, sum dipole moment vectors to determine if the molecule is polar or nonpolar.
Valence Bond (VB) Theory
- Basic Concept: Atoms bond through overlap of their atomic orbitals to form covalent bonds.
- Hybridization: Predicts bond angles and shapes:
- sp hybridization: 2 regions -> linear (180°).
- sp² hybridization: 3 regions -> trigonal planar (120°).
- sp³ hybridization: 4 regions -> tetrahedral (109.5°).
- sp³d hybridization: 5 regions -> trigonal bipyramidal (90°, 120°).
- sp³d² hybridization: 6 regions -> octahedral (90°).
Bonding Example: Methane (CH4)
- Hybridization: sp³ (four equivalent hybrid orbitals contributing to each C-H σ bond).
- Shape: Tetrahedral geometry, all C-H bond angles are approximately 109.5°.
Molecular Orbital Theory
- Molecular orbitals formed from the overlap of atomic orbitals (two MOs created per pair of atomic orbitals).
- Types of MOs: Bonding (σ) and Antibonding (σ*).
- Key Concepts:
- Bonding MOs: Constructive interference leads to a lower energy state.
- Antibonding MOs: Destructive interference leads to a higher energy state.
- Filling Order: Follow the Aufbau principle, Pauli Exclusion principle, and Hund’s Rule when populating molecular orbitals.
Magnetism and Bond Order
- Diamagnetic: Molecules with all paired electrons, weakly repelled by a magnetic field (e.g., H2).
- Paramagnetic: Molecules with unpaired electrons, attracted to a magnetic field.
- Bond Order Calculation:
ext{Bond Order} = rac{1}{2} imes (Nb - Na) where $Nb$ = number of bonding electrons and $Na$ = number of antibonding electrons.
Summary for Complex Molecules: Glycine
- Determine hybridization based on bonding and geometry. Identify sigma (σ) and pi (π) bonds present.
- Important to derive Lewis structures to establish connectivity and hybridization in molecular structure.