Ch09 Lecture 8e Student Version
Ch09 Lecture 8e Student Version
Ch09 Lecture 8e Student Version
9-2
Models of Chemical Bonding
9-3
Models of Chemical Bonding
9-4
Figure 9.1 A comparison of metals and nonmetals.
9-5
Lewis Electron-Dot Symbols
To draw the Lewis symbol for any main-group element:
• Note the group number, which gives the number of
valence electrons.
• Place one dot at a time on each of the four sides of the
element symbol.
• Keep adding dots, pairing them, until all are used up.
Example:
Nitrogen, N, is in Group 5 and therefore has 5 valence electrons.
•• • • •
•N• or • N• or • N or N•
••
••
• •• • •
9-6
Figure 9.4
Lewis electron-dot symbols for elements in Periods 2 and 3.
9-7
Lewis Symbols and Bonding
The octet rule states that when atoms bond, they lose,
gain, or share electrons to attain a filled outer level of 8
electrons (or 2, for H and Li: duet rule).
9-8
Types of Chemical Bonding
9-9
Figure 9.2 Three models of chemical bonding.
9-10
Models of Chemical Bonding
9-11
The Ionic Bonding Model
9-12
Figure 9.5 Three ways to depict electron transfer in the formation
of Li+ and F–.
Orbital diagrams
Li ↑↓ ↑ Li+ ↑↓
+ 1s 2s 2p 1s 2s 2p
F ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑ F- ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓
1s 2s 2p 1s 2s 2p
•• •• –
Li• •F Li+ + F
••
••
••
•• ••
9-13
Sample Problem 9.1 Depicting Ion Formation
SOLUTION:
Na• •• •• 2-
•O + O
••
••
2Na+
••
• ••
Na•
9-14
Sample Problem 9.1
Na ↑
3s 3p + O ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑ ↑
Na ↑ 2s 2p
3s 3p
2Na+ + O2– ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓ ↑↓
2s 2p
9-15
Properties of Ionic Compounds
9-16
Table 9.1 Melting and Boiling Points of Some Ionic Compounds
9-17
Figure 9.11 Ion pairs formed when an ionic compound vaporizes.
9-18
Figure 9.9 Why ionic compounds crack.
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Figure 9.10 Electrical conductance and ion mobility.
9-21
Figure 9.12 Covalent bond formation in H2.
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Bonding Pairs and Lone Pairs
in Covalent Compounds
Atoms share electrons to achieve a full outer level of
electrons. The shared electrons are called a shared pair
or bonding pair.
•• •• •• ••
F F or F–F
••
••
••
••
••
•• •• •• ••
9-23
Properties of a Covalent Bond
9-24
Table 9.2 Average Bond Energies (kJ/mol) and Bond Lengths (pm)
9-25
Trends in bond order, energy, and length
9-26
Table 9.3 The Relation of Bond Order, Bond Length, and
Bond Energy
9-27
Figure 9.14 Bond length and covalent radius.
72 pm 114 pm
100 pm 133 pm
9-28
Sample Problem 9.3 Comparing Bond Length and Bond Strength
PROBLEM: Using the periodic table, but not Tables 9.2 or 9.3, rank
the bonds in each set in order of decreasing bond length
and decreasing bond strength:
(a) S–F, S–Br, S–Cl (b) C=O, C–O, CΞO
9-29
Sample Problem 9.3
SOLUTION:
(a) Atomic size increases going down a group, so F < Cl < Br.
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Figure 9.15
Strong forces within molecules and weak forces between them.
9-31
Models of Chemical Bonding
9-32
Electronegativity and Bond Polarity
9-33
Figure 9.20 Bonding between the models.
9-34
Polar Covalent Bonds
9-35
Figure 9.23 Electron density distributions in H2, F2, and HF.
9-36
Trends in Electronegativity
9-37
Figure 9.21 The Pauling electronegativity (EN) scale.
9-38
Figure 9.22 Electronegativity and atomic size.
9-39
Electronegativity and Bond Polarity
Figure 9.24
ΔEN ranges for classifying the partial ionic
character of bonds.
9-40
Figure 9.26 Electron density distributions in bonds of the
Period 3 chlorides.
9-41
Figure 9.27 Properties of the Period 3 chlorides.
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
9-42
Sample Problem 9.5 Determining Bond Polarity from EN Values
9-43
Sample Problem 9.5
In order of polarity:
H-C < H-N < H-O
9-44
Models of Chemical Bonding
9-45
Metallic Bonding
“Electron Sea Model”
9-46
9-47
Properties of Metals
• Metals are generally solids with moderate to high melting
points and much higher boiling points.
• Strong attraction between the cations and the electron sea.
• Metals can be shaped without breaking.
• The electron sea prevents repulsion between cations but rather it
allows the metal ions to slide past each other and end up in a new
position, so metals dent and bent contrary to ionic compounds.
• Metals are good conductors of electricity in both the solid
and liquid states.
• The electron sea is mobile in both phases.
• Metals are good conductors of heat.
9-48
Table 9.5 Melting and Boiling Points of Some Metals
9-49
Figure 9.28
Melting points of the Group 1A(1) and Group 2A(2) metals.
9-50
Figure 9.29 Why metals dent and bend rather than crack.
9-51