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Chapter 10. Chemical Bonding II.

Molecular Geometry
and Hybridization of Atomic Orbitals

10.1 Molecular Geometry (what, how, why)

General Summary -- Structure and Bonding Concepts

Electronic Configuration Octet Rule Lewis Electron Dot


of Atoms Formula of Molecule

VSEPR Theory

3-D Shape of Molecule

Electronegativity Valence Bond


and Bond Polarity Theory

Bonding Description
Polarity of Molecule
of Molecule

Intermolecular Forces Chemical Reactivity


and Bulk Properties
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Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory
Hypothesis -- The structure of a molecule is that which minimizes the
repulsions between pairs of electrons on the central atom.

"Effective Number" (EN) = (number of atoms attached to central atom)


+ (number of lone pairs on central atom)

(Using the number of atoms is simpler than the number of bonding pairs, because
this accounts for double and triple bonds which essentially occupy the same space
as a single bond.)

EN Arrangement of Electron Pairs Molecular Shape Examples


(Geometry)
linear linear BeCl2, CO2
2 180°

trigonal planar BCl3, CH3+


3 trigonal planar
bent SnCl2, NO2-
120°

tetrahedral CH4, PO43-


tetrahedral
4 pyramidal NH3, ClO3-
109.5°
bent H2O, SeF2

a trigonal bipyramid PF5, SeCl5+


e trigonal
5 "see saw" SF4, BrF4+
e bipyramidal
e 120° & 90° T-shaped ClF3, XeO32-
a
linear XeF2, ICl2-

octahedral SF6, PCl6-


6 octahedral
square pyramid BrF5, SF5-
90°
square planar XeF4, IF4-

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Important corollaries:
• In trigonal bipyramid structures, lone e- pairs adopt equatorial positions (e)

• Order of repulsions: Lp - Lp > Lp - Bp > Bp - Bp


(Predicts distortions from ideal geometries)
 Molecules with more than one central atom, e.g., CH3OH, methanol
H
H
C O
H H

• C and H are "central"


• HCH and OCH ∠ 109 °
• O is like water with two lone pairs and two bonding pairs: ∠HOC = 105

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10.2 Dipole Moments (Polarity of Molecules)
predict from molecular shape

A. Bond Polarity
e.g., HF molecule
• F is more electronegative than H, so there is partial charge
separation in the H-F bond:
δ+ δ−
H F or H F
• the H-F bond is described as "polar covalent bond" and is said to
have a "dipole moment"

B. Molecule Polarity (Polar or Non-Polar?)

• Polar bonds do not always mean the molecule is polar

• In very symmetrical structures (e.g., CO2 or CF4), the


individual bond dipoles effectively cancel each other and the
molecule is non-polar.
F

O C O C
F F
F

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• In less symmetrical structures (e.g., SO2 and SF4), the
bond dipoles do not cancel and there is a net dipole moment
which makes the molecule polar.
F
.. F
S S ..
O O F
F

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Other examples for practice:

Polar: H2O SnCl2 NH3 SeF2 PF3 BrF5 XeO3

Non-Polar: BeCl2 CH4 PF5 XeF2 XeF4 SO3

10.3 Valence Bond Theory

A. Why is additional theory needed?


• VSEPR predicts H2 and F2 are the same type of bond
• H2 bond dissociation energy = 436.4 kJ/mole
• F2 bond dissociation energy = 150.6 kJ/mole
• Need better theory to explain these types of differences.

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B. Basic Concept

Covalent Bonds result from overlap of atomic orbitals

consider the H2 molecule

1s 1s
σ bond
. + . . .
H H H2

Figure 10.5 shows the change in potential energy with distance


between atoms
• atoms distant - no interaction
• atoms approach - electron from one atom is attracted to
nucleus of other
• atoms get very close - nuclei repel each other

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F2 molecule
2p 2p σ bond
. + . . .
F F F2
HF molecule
2p σ bond
. + . . .
F H F
H

Two types of covalent bonds:

σ (sigma) bond: "head-to-head" overlap along the bond axis


(as in previous pictures)

π (pi) bond: "side-to-side" overlap of p orbitals:

π bond

. + . . .

2p 2p

• single bond -- always a σ bond


• double bond -- combination of one σ bond and one π bond
• triple bond -- combination of one σ bond and two π bonds

10.4 Hybridization of Atomic Orbitals

Problem: Describe the bonding in CH4 molecule.


• experimental fact -- CH4 is tetrahedral (H-C-H angle = 109.5°)
• VSEPR theory "explains" this with 4 e- pairs, ∴ tetrahedral
• however, if only s and p orbitals are used, the angles ought to be 90°
since the p orbitals are mutually perpendicular!

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Solution: Modify the theory of atomic orbitals and use:

Hybridization: combination of 2 or more atomic orbitals on


the same atom to form a new set of
"Hybrid Atomic Orbitals" used in bonding.

CH4 (methane)
Energy Level Diagram

C ↑↓ ↑ ↑ ground state - valence shell orbital diagram


2s 2p 2p 2p • H electrons can only share with C p orbitals
• bond angles can only be 90° angles required
by p orbitals -- wrong, must be 109°

So try promoting
C ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ Now have four orbitals, but still have three that
2s 2p 2p 2p are 90° apart

So try mixing the four into new orbitals


C ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ hybridized state (mixing of s and p orbitals)
3 3
sp sp sp sp 3 3 (gives 4 identical bonds that are 109.5° angles
-- right!)

So what do these new orbitals look like?


see Figures 10.7 and 10.8 and 10.9

Types of Hybrid Orbitals (see Table 10.4)

Unhybridized p
Atomic Orbitals Hybrid Orbitals Geometry Orbitals (left over)
linear
one s + one p two sp 2
(180°)
trigonal planar
one s + two p three sp2 1
(120°)
one s + three p four sp3 tetrahedral 0
(109.5°)
one s + three p + trigonal bipyramid
five dsp3 90° & 120°
one d
one s + three p + octahedral
six d2sp3 90°
two d

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{ Note: combination of n AO's yields n Hybrid Orbitals)
Practice: Use valence bond theory to describe the bonding in H2O, NH3, CH4, PF3.

Draw clear 3-D pictures (method shown in class) showing orbital overlap, etc.

[Note: All use only simple σ bonds and lone pairs.]

10.5 Hybridization in Molecules Containing Double & Triple Bonds


ethylene: sigma + pi bond (see Figure 10.16)
H H
C C
H H

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acetylene sigma + two pi bonds (see Figure 10.19)

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PRACTICE on
• H2CNH (use double bond like H2CO and H2CCH2)
• HCN (use triple bond like HCCH)

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10.6 Molecular Orbital Theory

A. Comparison of VB and MO Theory

Valence Bond Theory ("simple" but somewhat limited)

• e- pair bonds between two atoms using overlap of atomic orbitals


on two atoms
• sometimes fails to explain facts, e.g., O2 is paramagnetic
indicating unpaired electrons, but VB theory would indicate that
electrons in the σ and π orbitals are paired.

Molecular Orbital Theory (more general but "complex")

• all e-'s in molecule fill up a set of molecular orbitals that are


made up of linear combinations of atomic orbitals on two or more
atoms

MO's can be:

• "localized" -- combination of AO's on two atoms, as in


the diatomic molecules
• "delocalized" -- combination of AO's on three or more
atoms, as in benzene (C6H6) -- page 424

B. Bonding and Antibonding Molecular Orbitals

Molecular Orbitals for simple diatomic molecules (H2 and He2)

in H2 the 1s atomic orbitals on the two H atoms are combined into:

• a bonding MO -- σ1s
• lower energy than the atomic orbitals from which it
was formed, .i.e., greater stability
• more electron density between nuclei from
constructive interference (wave properties of the
electron)
• an antibonding MO -- σ*1s
• higher energy and lower stability than the atomic
orbitals from which it was formed
• no electron density between nuclei from destructive
interference

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MO energy level diagram for H2 (only the bonding MO is filled):

σ*1s

1s 1s

σ1s
H H2 H Figure 10.23

In contrast, the MO diagram for the nonexistent molecule, He2 shows that
both bonding and antibonding MO's are filled:

σ*1s

1s 1s

σ1s
He He2 He
Figure 10.25

Bond Order = ½ [(# bonding e-'s) - (# antibonding e-'s)]

for H2 = ½ [2 - 0] = 1 (a single bond)

for He2 = ½ [2 - 2] = 0 (no net bonding interaction)

C. Bonding and Antibonding Molecular Orbitals from p Atomic Orbitals

Figure 10.24 - shows interaction to form


• σ bonds when atomic orbitals approach end to end
• π bonds when atomic orbitals approach side to side

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10.7 Molecular Orbital Configurations/Rules

A. Rules
1. The number of MO's equal the number of AO's used to make the
MO's
2. The more stable the bonding MO, the less stable the antibonding
MO
3. MO's fill from low to high energies
4. In stable molecules, the number of
electrons in bonding MO's > electrons in antibonding MO's
5. Maximum of 2 electrons per MO (with opposite spins)
6. Follow Hund's rule - electrons do not pair until all MO's of the same
energy are half filled
7. The number of electrons in MOs equals sum of all of the electrons
in the atoms

B. MO's for 2nd Row Diatomic Molecules (e.g., N2, O2, F2, etc.)

MO energy level diagram -- Figures10.26 plus 10.27

σ*2p x
π*2p y π*2p z

2p 2p

σ2p x
π2p π2pz
y

σ*2s

2s 2s

σ2s
σ*1s

1s 1s

σ1s

Examples -- Table 10.5 (Note the change at O2 and F2)

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Fill in MO diagram for C2, N2, O2, F2, and Ne2


and determine bond order for each:

molecule C2 N2 O2 F2 Ne2
bond order 2 3 2 1 0

B. Electron Configurations valence electrons in blue

Example: N2

(σ1s)2(σ*1s)2(σ2s)2(σ*2s)2(π2p )2(π2p )2(σ2p )2


y z x
Example: O2
(σ1s)2(σ*1s)2(σ2s)2(σ*2s)2 (σ2p )2 (π2p )2(π2p )2 (π*2p )1(π*2p )1
x y z y z

10.7 Delocalized Molecular Orbitals

By combining AO's from three or more atoms, it is possible to generate MO's


that are "delocalized" over three or more atoms

Examples:
Resonance in species like HCO32-, CO3-2 and benzene (C6H6)
can be "explained" with a single MO description containing
delocalized π bonds.

• see Figure 10.28 sigma framework in benzene

H
H C H
C C
C C
H C H
H

• see Figure 10.29 for pi framework


• see Figure 10.30 for the carbonate ion pi framework

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Bonding in Solids -- Band Theory

An energy "band" is composed of a very large number of closely spaced


energy levels that are formed by combining similar atomic orbitals of atoms
throughout the substance

Metals and metalloids have a

• "conduction band" -- set of highly delocalized, partially filled, MO's that


extend over the entire solid lattice structure

• "band gap" -- energy difference between filled "valence band"


and the conduction band (Figure 20.10)

Chapter 10 Chemistry 1303

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