Lewis Structures Notes • Draw the dot diagram for
Transcription
Lewis Structures Notes • Draw the dot diagram for
Lewis Structures Notes • Draw the dot diagram for each atom. Make sure you place the electrons in the correct order. • Draw the dot diagrams for Carbon, Nitrogen and Oxygen. • Steps for drawing Lewis Structures: o Order the atoms- the atom with the most unpaired electrons will be the central atom (Carbon is always the central atom). o Draw the dot diagram for each element in the compound. o Pair up all unpaired electrons. • Examples: o Phosphorous and Chlorine (PCl3) o Carbon and Bromine (CBr4) • Ionic Dot Diagrams- the electrons are gained and lost, not shared. Put each atom in a bracket with its balance electrons around it. The charge of the atom goes outside of the bracket. o Ex: Sodium Chloride (NaCl) Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 12 Ionic Lewis Structure Activity In this activity we will be modeling what an Ionic Bond is using cereal to represent the valence electrons. Please follow the following steps for modeling what occurs in the following ionic compounds: 1. Draw the element’s symbols in the designated box. 2. Assign the proper number of valance electrons (Cereal) to each original element 3. Make an ionic bond to create a balanced neutral compound by moving a valence electron (Cereal) 4. Draw the correct Lewis Structure in the box below. 5. Write the formula or name of the compound. KBr Magnesium chloride CaO Lithium oxide Mg3N2 Sodium Sulfide Fe2O3 Silver Nitrate PbS2 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 13 Covalent Bonding Notes • Covalent bonds are between _____________________________________________. • Covalent bonds are formed when electrons are _____________________ between two atoms. If two atoms share 4 electrons, they form a ______________________________. If two atoms share 6 electrons, they form a ____________________________. • There are two types of covalent bonds: polar and non-polar. Polar bonds have an electronegativity difference between ___________________________. Non-polar bonds have an electronegativity difference less than ___________________. • In polar bonds, the electrons are shared ________________________________. In non-polar bonds, the electrons are shared ________________________________. • Covalent compounds can exist in any state (solid, liquid or gas). They have _____________ melting and boiling points. • Write the correct formulas for each covalent compound: Compound Name water Carbon Dioxide Chlorine (Diatomic Element) Methane (5 total atoms) Ammonia (4 total atoms) Carbon tetrabromide (5 total atoms) Phosphorous trichloride (4 total atoms) Diphosphorous trioxide (5 total atoms) Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Oxidation States O (-2) H (+1) C (+4) O (-2) Covalent Formula Cl (-1) C (-4) H (+1) N (-3) H (+1) C (+4) Br (-1) P (-3) Cl (-1) P (-3) O (-2) Page 14 Polyatomic Ions • Ions formed from a single atom are known as ions. • You wrote formulas for ionic compounds using monoatomic ions. Many ionic and covalent compounds found in chemistry contain polyatomic ions, which are ions made up of . • Practice writing ionic formulas using polyatomic ions: BaCO3 Al2(SO4)3 Zn(ClO)2 Pb(C2H3O2)2 Cobalt (III) Nitrate Ammonium Chloride Silver Chlorate Barium Phosphate • How would you write the formula for calcium hydroxide? . Is there a difference between CaOH2 & Ca(OH)2 ? Circle the correct formula. • When more than one polyatomic ion is present, the formula for the polyatomic ion is surrounded by Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature . Page 15 Covalent Lewis Activity In this activity we will be modeling what a Covalent Bond is using cereal to represent the valence electrons. Please follow the following steps for modeling what occurs in the following ionic compounds: 1. Draw the element’s symbols in the designated box. 2. Assign the proper number of valance electrons (cereal) to each original element 3. Make a covalent bond to create a balanced neutral compound. 4. Draw the correct Lewis Structure in the box below. 5. Mark with stars the compounds that are diatomic. CO2 H2 O NH3 F2 O2 N2 ClO3 PO3 SO2 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 16 Lewis Dot Structure Worksheet Here are the basic steps involved in drawing the Lewis dot structure for a molecule: a) Calculate the total number of valence electrons in the molecule (take the number of valence electrons for each atom and add them together). b) Draw the electrons around each atom. Put the atom that normally forms the most bonds in the center. c) Each single bond contains 2 electrons. In the spaces below, draw the Lewis structure for each molecule. Each molecule contains only single bonds. Write the total number of electrons for each molecule in the upper right corner. H2 O NH3 electrons CH4O CCl4 electrons C2H6 electrons Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature electrons OF2 electrons electrons Page 17 Now we are going to look at molecules that contain at least one double or triple bond. In the spaces below, draw the Lewis structure for each molecule. Write the total number of electrons for each molecule in the upper right corner. O2 N2 electrons SO3 CO2 electrons electrons PO4 electrons electrons Some chemical substances represent EXCEPTIONS to the octet rule. For example, boron trichloride has a Lewis dot structure that only has three single bonds. The boron atom is surrounded by only 6 electrons instead of 8. Draw the Lewis structure for BCl3 BCl3 electrons Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 18 Covalent Naming Notes • Binary covalent compounds are characterized by having two nonmetals. Naming these compounds involves the use of numerical prefixes: Prefix Number Prefix Number 1 6 2 7 3 8 4 9 5 10 • If there is only ONE atom of the first element, you DON’T need a prefix. The FIRST element is named as a normal element. The SECOND element has an –IDE ending. o N2O4 o XeF4 o N2O5 o CO o CBr4 o Diarsenic pentoxide o Phosphorous pentabromide o Carbon tetraiodide o Trisilicon tetranitride o Tetraphosphorous decoxide Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 19 Covalent Naming Worksheet CO2 __________________________ NI3 __________________________ _____ CO _________________________ SiBr4 ____________________________ PCl5 __________________________ SF6 __________________________ N 2O __________________________ As2O5 __________________________ N2O3 __________________________ Cl2S7 __________________________ B2Cl4 __________________________ P4O10 __________________________ nitrogen dioxide sulfur hexabromide carbon diselenide diphosphorus trioxide silicon tetrachloride phosphorus trifluoride dinitrogen tetrasulfide Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature ___ ___ arsenic pentafluoride dibromine heptaoxide xenon hexafluoride Page 20 Naming Acids • If the compound begins with Hydrogen, it is an acid. If the acid does not contain a polyatomic ion, write the prefix hydro-, then name the second element and change the ending to –ic.’ o HCl o HBr o H 2S Naming Acids with Polyatomic Ions The polyatomic ions you have memorized have –ate as the ending, so you name the polyatomic ion and change the ending to –ic. Use sulfate (SO42-) as the example • H2SO4 is sulfuric acid • If the ion has one more oxygen atom than the base (SO42-), then the ion is named by adding the prefix per- and the suffix –ic o H2SO5 is persulfuric acid • If the ion has one less oxygen atom than the base (SO42-), then the ion is named with the suffix –ous. o H2SO3 is sulfurous acid • If the ion has two less oxygen atoms than the base (SO42-), then the ion is named with the prefix hypo- and the suffix –ous. o H2SO2 is hyposulfurous acid Name the following: 1. H2CO3 2. H3PO2 3. HClO4 4. H3PO3 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 21 VSPER- Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion VSPER is used to describe the ____________ ___________ of molecules Single, double, or triple bonds act ________________. Unbonded electrons, ___________ ______________ of electrons take up more space than bonded pairs of electrons. Electron densities (lone pairs and bonds) will arrange themselves _____________ around an atom to minimize repulsive forces. Steps to determine geometry: 1. Draw the Lewis Structure 2. Count up the number of bonds on the central atom. 3. Look on the chart to find the shape (You will NOT have the chart on the test). Bonds Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Lone Pairs Shape Linear Bent Trigonal Planar Trigonal Pyramidal Tetrahedral Page 22 VSEPR Complete the table with the requested information. Molecule Structural Diagram Oxidation State of each element Molecular Geometry CClF3 SF2 BF3 SiBr4 NH3 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 23 Shapes and Bonding Orbitals Activity Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 24 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 25 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 26 VSEPR Worksheet 1) What is the main idea behind VSEPR theory? 2) For each of the following compounds, determine the bond angles, molecular shapes, and hybridizations for all atoms: a) carbon tetrachloride b) BH3 c) silicon disulfide d) C2H2 e) PF3 Unit 6: Bonding and Nomenclature Page 27