Molecular Geometry Molecular Geometry Problems with
Transcription
Molecular Geometry Molecular Geometry Problems with
CHEM 107, Spring 2015 Molecular Geometry Class #20 Molecular Geometry CHEM 107 L.S. Brown Texas A&M University • What shapes are molecules? • Can we actually measure them? How? • How can we explain and predict these shapes? Problems with Orbital Overlap Idea Methane • Simple overlap of atomic orbitals suggests that molecules with p valence electrons should have bond angles of 90° • Experiments show other bond angles are much more common • What about a molecule like methane? Why CH4 and not CH2? • All 4 bonds are equivalent: same length, same energy • H-C-H bond angles 109.5° • Can’t reconcile this with overlap of s, p orbitals • “Hybrid Orbitals” Hybrid Orbitals Hybrid Orbitals • “Patch” to the orbital overlap model. Needed to match observed facts. • For CH4, need to form 4 identical bonds on carbon • Need 4 identical orbitals, each with one electron • “Create” sp3 hybrid orbitals • Imagine mixing 2 orbitals. Easiest pair is an s and a single p +" ! –" ! • 2 new ‘sp hybrid’ orbitals from 2 original orbitals © 2015, L.S. Brown 1 CHEM 107, Spring 2015 sp3 Hybrid Orbitals sp3 Hybrid Orbitals • Mix 4 orbitals, get 4 new identical orbitals • Energy between s and p • Angles of 109.5° • Tetrahedral shape • Let’s us explain bonding in methane (and lots of other molecules, too) NH3 • Lewis Structure: • Single bonds to 4 other atoms CH4, NH4+, (CH3)4Si • Other combinations with “steric number” of four, including “lone pairs” of e–’s H2O, NH3 NH3 - Trigonal Pyramid H N H H • N: Bound to 3 atoms, 1 Lone Pair • Steric Number = 3 + 1 = 4 • need 4 orbitals: sp3 hybrids H 2O • sp3 orbitals point at tetrahedral angles • 3 orbitals form bonds, 1 holds lone pair • Shape defined by atoms, NOT lone pairs • “Trigonal pyramid” H2O - Bent Shape • Lewis Structure: H O H • O: Bound to 2 atoms, 2 Lone Pairs • Steric Number = 2 + 2 = 4 • Need 4 orbitals: sp3 hybrids • sp3 orbitals point at tetrahedral angles • 2 orbitals form bonds, 2 hold lone pairs • Shape defined by atoms, NOT lone pairs • “Bent” molecule © 2015, L.S. Brown 2 CHEM 107, Spring 2015 Other Hybridizations Steric Number & Hybridization • We can form other hybrids s + 3p’s ! sp3 s + 2p’s ! sp2 s + p ! sp • Same ideas, but get orbitals at different angles Orbital Orientation vs. Molecular Geometry • Molecular shape based on position of ATOMS • All hybrids used for bonds ! molecular geometry same as orbital orientation • Lone pairs on central atom ! molecular shape differs from orbital orientation Steric Number of 3 • sp2 hybrids, trigonal planar orientation • No lone pairs ! trigonal planar molecule BF3, NO3 – • One lone pair ! bent triatomic molecule O3, NO2 Steric Number of 2 • sp hybrids, linear orientation • No lone pairs ! linear molecule CO2 Steric Number of 4 • sp3 hybrids, tetrahedral orientation • No lone pairs !tetrahedral CH4, NH4+ • One lone pair ! trigonal pyramid NH3 • Two lone pairs ! bent H 2O © 2015, L.S. Brown 3 CHEM 107, Spring 2015 Steric Number of 5 Steric Number of 5 • One lone pair ! “seesaw” molecule • Trigonal bipyramid orientation • No lone pairs ! trigonal bipyramid molecule SF4 • Two lone pairs ! T-shape molecule ClF3 PCl5 • Lone pairs: Positions not all equivalent! • Three lone pairs ! Linear molecule I3– Steric Number of 6 Multiple Bonds • Octahedral orientation • No lone pairs ! octahedral • How can orbitals overlap to form double or triple bonds? • Start with a simple example: C2H4 • First draw a Lewis structure SF6 • One lone pair ! square pyramid ClF5 • Two lone pairs ! square planar XeF4 Ethylene - C2H4 Ethylene - C2H4 H H C H H C H C H • Carbons have steric number of 3 ! • Overlap of sp2 orbitals from each carbon forms single bond. • Double bond? H sp2 C H • Double bond? • “Sideways” overlap of unhybridized p orbitals from carbon atoms • “π bond” © 2015, L.S. Brown 4 CHEM 107, Spring 2015 Acetylene - C2H2 Acetylene - C2H2 H H C C H • Carbons have steric number of 2 ! sp • “Sigma bond” from overlap of 2 sp hybrids • Triple bond? C C H • Triple bond ! 3 bonds • Need 2 π bonds in addition to σ bond • “Sideways” overlap of unhybridized p orbitals on carbon atoms, this time using 2 p orbitals from each carbon (px and py ) Multiple Bonds • In orbital overlap (or “localized bond”) model: – Single bond is a σ bond – Double bond consists of a σ bond and a π bond – Triple bond consists of a σ bond and two π bonds © 2015, L.S. Brown 5