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Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding

Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

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Page 1: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Chapter 8

Covalent Bonding

Page 2: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to

form a stable octet. Covalent bond : the chemical bond

that results from the sharing of valence electrons

also called a molecular bond

Page 3: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

• Molecule: formed when two or more atoms bond covalently

• Formed when the proton of one atom is attracted to the electron cloud of another atom.

Page 5: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

• Bonding pair: a pair of electrons shared by two atoms

• Lone pair: an unshared pair of electrons on an atom

Page 6: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

When a single pair of electrons is shared, a single covalent bond forms.

This can be represented with a Lewis structure: uses electron dot diagrams to show how electrons are arranged in molecules.

Page 7: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Demo: Sulfur Plus Oxygen

Page 8: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Group 17 elements will form one covalent bond.

Group 16 elements will form two covalent bonds.

Group 15 elements will form three covalent bonds.

Group 14 elements will form four covalent bonds.

Page 9: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results
Page 10: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results
Page 11: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

• Single covalent bonds are also called sigma bonds: the electron pair is centered between two atoms.

Page 12: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results
Page 13: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

     When more than one pair of electrons is shared, a multiple

covalent bond is formed. Reading Question # 5

– Name the seven diatomic molecules.

Page 14: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results
Page 15: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Multiple bonds are made up of sigma bonds and pi bonds: formed when parallel orbitals share electrons.

   A double covalent bonds has one sigma and one pi bond.

A triple covalent bond has one sigma and two pi bonds. 

Page 16: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Nomenclature

Page 17: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Strength of Covalent Bonds The strength of covalent

bonds is determined by the bond length: distance between the bond nuclei

Bond length is determined by:

The size of the atoms involved—larger atoms have longer bond lengths

How many pairs of electrons are shared—the more pairs of electrons shared, the shorter the bond length is.

Page 18: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

The strength of a covalent bond is indicated by its bond dissociation energy: the amount of energy required to break the bond.

When a bond forms, energy is released; when a bond breaks, energy must be added.

Each covalent bond has a specific value for its bond dissociation energy. These values are determined experimentally.

Page 19: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

A direct relationship exists between bond energy and bond length:

The total energy change of a chemical reaction is determined from the energy of the bonds broken and formed in the reaction.

Endothermic reactions: have a net absorption of energy

Exothermic reactions: have a net release of energy

Page 20: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

How do we show the arrangement of atoms in a molecule?

By using Lewis structures:

Page 21: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Five steps to draw Lewis structures: Count the total number of valence electrons in all

atoms involved. Write a skeleton equation, subtracting the # of

electrons used to show bonds. Fill the octet of the terminal atoms. Subtract

electrons. Place any remaining electrons around the central

atom to satisfy its octet. If the central atom cannot be satisfied, make a multiple bond using a lone pair from the terminal atoms.

Check your work 

Page 22: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Hints for skeleton equation: Hydrogen is always an end atom The atom with the least attraction for

shared electrons is the central atom. This element is usually the one closer to the left on the periodic table. 

Place lone pairs around each outer atom to satisfy their octets. Subtract the number of electrons used.

Page 23: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

ExampleCCl4

Page 24: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

NH3

Page 25: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

CO2

Page 26: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Drawing Lewis structures for polyatomic ions is very similar to drawing Lewis structures for covalent

compounds EXCEPT in finding the number of electrons available for bonding

Count the total number of valence electrons in all atoms involved.

If the polyatomic ion is negatively charged, ADD the charge to the number of valence electrons.

If the ion is positively charged, SUBRACT the charge from the number of valence electrons.

Follow the rest of the steps to drawing Lewis structures.

Page 27: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Example Polyatomic IonNO2

-1

Page 28: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Resonance Structures When a molecule or polyatomic ion has

both a double bond and a single bond, it is possible to have more than one correct Lewis structure:

Page 29: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Resonance: a condition that occurs when more than one valid Lewis structure can be written for a molecule or ion. The structures are called resonance structures.

A molecule that undergoes resonance behaves as if it has only one structure.

Page 30: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results
Page 31: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Exceptions to the Octet RuleAlways on Central Atom

  

Three Ways Molecules Might Violate the Octet Rule

1. Odd Number of Valence Electrons– Some molecules have an odd number of

valence electrons and cannot form an octet around each atom

Page 32: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Sub Octet… Less than 8 Some compounds form with fewer than

8 electrons present around an atom.

Boron does this. – Coordinate covalent bond: when one

atom donates an entire pair of electrons to be shared with atoms or ions that need two more electrons.

Page 33: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Expanded Octet Some atoms can have expanded

octets: have more than eight electrons in their valence shell.

Page 34: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

How? – The d orbital starts to hold electrons.– This occurs in atoms in Period 3 or higher.  – When you draw Lewis structures for these

compounds, extra lone pairs are added to the central atom OR the central atom will form more than four bonds.

Page 35: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Molecular Shape When we talk about how a molecule

“looks” we talk about three characteristics: 1.Shape

2.Bond Angles

3.Hybridization

Page 36: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

VSEPR Model The shape of a molecule determines

whether or not two molecules can get close enough to react.

We describe shape using the VSEPR model.

Page 37: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

This model is based on the fact that electrons pairs will stay as far away from each other as possible

Valence

Shell

Electron

Pair

Repulsion

Page 38: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Atoms will assume certain bond angles: the angle formed by any two terminal atoms and the central atom

Lone pairs take up more space than bonded pairs do.

Page 39: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Model Building Draw the Lewis Structure. Count the Bonded Pairs of Electrons

around the central atom. Count the unbonded pairs of electrons. Look up the amounts on the VSEPR

chart. Classify the molecular geometry

(shape). Build the molecule.

Page 40: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results
Page 41: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Hybridization During bonding, atomic orbitals can undergo

hybridization: a process in which atomic orbitals are mixed to form new, identical hybrid orbitals.

Hybridization occurs on the central atom.  Carbon is the most common element that undergoes

hybridization.

Carbon has the electron configuration 1s22s22p2   S and p orbitals are shaped very differently. If 2 e-s

are in the s orbital and 2 e-s are in the p orbitals, why are all 4 bonds the same in the molecule CH4?

One s orbital and three p orbitals combine to form 4 sp3 orbitals. Each one of these orbitals has one valence electron.

Page 42: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Determine the molecular geometry, bond angle, and type of hybridization for the following:

BF3

NH4+

OCl2 BeF2

CF4

Page 43: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Determining Bond Type Electronegativity and Polarity Classifying Molecules as polar or

nonpolar

Page 44: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Electronegativity and Polarity Electron affinity is the tendency of an

atom to accept an electron. The scale of electronegativities allows

chemists to predict electron affinities of atom in compounds.

Upper right high electronegativity. Lower left low electronegativity

Page 45: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Electronegativity Difference Determines the type of bond formed between

two atoms. Identical elements have equal

electronegativities, no difference… the bond is said to be nonpolar covalent (a pure covalent bond).

Unequal sharing of electrons results in a polar covalent bond.

Very large differences in electronegativity result in electron transfer (ionic bonding).

Page 46: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

What does Polar mean? Unequal sharing of electrons One atom pulls the electrons to itself more of

the time. Partial charges occur at the ends of the bond. More electronegative atom gets the partially

negative charge and The lower electronegative atom gets the

partial positive charge. Called a Dipole.

Page 47: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Classify the bond Ionic Bond: electronegativity

difference of greater than 1.7 Polar Covalent Bond: e.d. of 0.3-1.7 Nonpolar Covalent Bond: e.d. less

than 0.3

Page 48: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Molecular Polarity Molecules are either polar or nonpolar

depending on the bonds in the molecule.

We must look at the shape (geometry) of a molecule to determine polarity.

Symmetric molecules are nonpolar.

Page 49: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Solubility of Polar Molecules Bond type and shape of the molecule

determine solubility. Polar substances and ionic substances

will dissolve in polar solvents. Nonpolar substances will only dissolve

in nonpolar substances.

Page 50: Chapter 8 Covalent Bonding. The Covalent Bond Atoms will share electrons in order to form a stable octet. l Covalent bond : the chemical bond that results

Molecules

Polar Opposite ends + end - end Asymmetrical Stronger bonds Unequal distribution of

electron pairs Higher boiling pts Higher melting points Lower evaporation rates

NonPolar Ends are the same No charged ends Symmetrical Weaker Intermolecular

attractions Temporary dipoles

between molecules Bonding is weak Low melting and boiling

points high evaporation rates