Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B....

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Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals

Transcript of Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B....

Page 1: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

Chapter 9Covalent Bonding: Orbitals

Page 2: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

9.1: I. Hybridization• A. Bond only includes valence e-

• B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e- need to be for lowest energy and least amount of repulsions

• C. As a molecule, atoms form a mixture of orbitals (“hybrid”) from its valence orbitals

Page 3: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

II. Carbon in CH4• A. Carbon has s and p valence orbitals that form sp3

hybrid orbitals when making 4 single bonds

• B. Called sp3 because there is one s and three p orbitals involved, bond angle of ~109º

• C. Carbon is “sp3 hybridized” in CH4

Page 4: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

III. sp2 Hybridization• A. Carbon in C2H4 has one double and 2 single bonds

• B. Carbon with three bonds is sp2 hybridized

• C. Uses one s and two p orbitals to give trigonal planar structure,120º angle

• D. Remaining p orbitals are oriented perpendicular to double bond to minimize electron repulsions

Page 5: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

• E. Overlapping orbitals are sigma (σ) orbitals with sigma (σ) bond

• F. Parallel orbitals are pi () orbitals with pi ()

bond

• G. Need a sigma and pi bond to form double bond

Page 6: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

IV. SP Hybridization• A. Carbon in CO2 has 2 effective bonds

• B. Involves one s and one p (“sp” orbital) with 180º bond angle

• C. Oxygen has sp2 hybridization in CO2 (1 bond, 2 lone pairs)

Page 7: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

V. sp3d, sp3d2 Hybridization• A. When atoms exceed octet rule, we need more

than s and p orbitals

• B. PCl5 forms 5 bonds so we use sp3d hybridization

• C. Sulfur in SF6 has 6 bonds, sp3d2 hybridization

Page 8: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

9.2: I. Molecular Orbital Model

• A. Unlike hybrid orbitals which are combinations of an atoms own orbitals (s,p, or d), molecular orbitals are combinations between the orbitals of two atoms

• B. Mathematically determined locations where electrons involved in molecules exist

• C. Get two different types: “bonding” (when e- between atoms) and “anti-bonding” (lone pairs or e- not shared)

Page 9: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

II. Example H2• A. H has 1s orbital, combined with itself you get:

MO1 = 1sA + 1sB MO2 = 1sA – 1sB

• B. Bonding MO has a sigma bond (σ) and is lower energy than separate atoms (more stable)

• C. Anti-bonding MO has repelling force, is called σ* and has higher energy than separate atoms

Page 10: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

III. Molecular Orbital Rules

1. Sigma bonds between molecular orbitals in same plane

2. Pi bonds between parallel molecular orbitals

3. Bonding orbitals always lower energy than anti-bonding

4. Anti-bonding orbitals indicated by asterisk

5. Molecular e- configuration written same way as atomic e- config.

6. Each molecular orbital can hold 2 e-s (opposite spin)7. # of molecular orbitals always same as number of

atomic orbitals used to create them

Page 11: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

IV. Molecular Orbital Energy Diagram• A. Shows electron placement as separate atoms and

as joined atoms, includes both bonding and anti-bonding molecular orbitals

Page 12: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

V. Using MO Energy Diagrams

A. Fill in e- in lowest energy states first when combined from both atoms, extra e- go in anti-bonding state

Page 13: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

VI. Bond Order• A. Indicates relative strength of bond

• B. Difference between number of bonding e- and anti-bonding e- divided by two

• C. B.O. = (# bonding “e-” - # of anti-bonding “e-”)/2

• D. Larger number = stronger bond

• E. H2 = 1, H2+ = ½, H2

- = ½

F. Helium’s bond order bonded to itself is 0, so it is not as stable as separate atoms which is why it doesn’t form a pair

Page 14: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

9.3: I. Homonuclear Diatomic Molecules• A. Diatomic molecules are

made of two identical atoms (H2, O2, Cl2, F2, etc.)

• B. We only consider the valence e- because the inner shells are not close enough to the other atom to form molecular orbitals

• C. Any molecule with only s orbitals in the valence shell will interact similarly to H2

Page 15: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

II. What Happens to P Orbitals?• A. P orbitals

interact in two ways depending on their orientations

Sigma (σ) Bond

Pi (π) Bond

Page 16: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

III. P Molecular Orbital Energy Diagrams• A. P orbitals that align form sigma bonds, P orbitals

that are parallel form pi bonds• B. We need energy levels for the sigma (σ) bond, anti-

sigma (σ*) bond, pi () bond, and anti-pi (*) bond

• C. This is the energy diagram for just the p orbitals (we can’t put any s orbital e- here)

• D. Each line holds two e- just like each orientation of the p orbitals

Page 17: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

IV. Bond Order for P orbital• A. To determine bond order for something with

a p orbital, we also have to consider s orbitals in terms of bonding vs. anti-bonding electrons

Ex. Boron Bond order = (bonding

electrons–non-bonding)/2

B.O. = (4 – 2)/2 = 1, stable atom, higher numbers better

Page 18: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

V. Paramagnetism/Diamagnetism• A. Most materials aren’t

magnetic, but when in a magnetic field, two types of magnetism can result:– Paramagnetism: substance

attracted to whatever causes magnetic field

– Diamagnetism: substance repelled from source

• B. If a substance has both paired and unpaired electrons, the paramagnetic effect will usually over-power diamagnetism

***Paramagnetism is related to unpaired

electrons, diamagnetism related to paired electrons***

Page 19: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

VI. Paramagnetic or Diamagnetic?Boron Carbon

Page 20: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

VII. Bonding Summary• A. As bond order increases, bond energy increases

and bond length decreases• B. Bond orders cannot be used definitively for bond

strength because e- repulsion can weaken the strength

• C. Bond order is somewhat related to # of covalent bonds

• D. B.O.= 1 is single bond, 2 is double bond, 3 is triple bond, ½ numbers are in between

• E. The molecular orbital theory better at explaining paramagnetism and diamagnetism than the localized e- model

Page 21: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

9.4: I. Heteronuclear Diatomic Molecules• A. Different atoms bonded

• B. Can use the homonuclear energy diagram for atoms near each other on periodic table (ex. N, O)

• C. For farther apart atoms we need different energy chart

Page 22: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

9.5: I. Combining Localized and Molecular Orbital Models

• A. Resonance structures for a molecule are different possible e- positions that actually occur simultaneously

• B. Combining these two models eliminates the need for the idea of resonance by assuming that e- are not localized (in isolated positions)

Page 23: Chapter 9 Covalent Bonding: Orbitals. 9.1: I. Hybridization A. Bond only includes valence e - B. When alone, an atom has orbitals based on where its e.

II. Sigma and Pi bonds in Resonance

• A. In resonance structures, the only aspect of the molecule that changes is the placement of double bonds

• B. Since double bonds are made of a sigma and a pi bond, the only thing actually changing in resonance structures is the pi bond placement