💏Intro to Chemistry Unit 8 – Advanced Theories of Covalent Bonding
Covalent bonding involves the sharing of electrons between atoms, forming stable molecules. Advanced theories like Valence Bond Theory and Molecular Orbital Theory provide deeper insights into this process, explaining molecular geometry, hybridization, and bond properties.
These concepts are crucial for understanding chemical reactions, material properties, and biological processes. From predicting molecular shapes to explaining intermolecular forces, advanced covalent bonding theories form the foundation for many areas of chemistry and related sciences.
Covalent bonding involves sharing of electrons between atoms to achieve stable electronic configurations
Advanced bonding models provide more accurate descriptions of covalent bonding compared to simple Lewis structures
Valence Bond Theory (VBT) considers atomic orbitals and orbital overlap
Molecular Orbital Theory (MOT) treats molecular orbitals as linear combinations of atomic orbitals
Molecular geometry is determined by the arrangement of atoms in a molecule and influences its properties
Hybridization is the mixing of atomic orbitals to form new hybrid orbitals with specific geometries
Bond properties, such as length and strength, are influenced by the electronic structure of the bonded atoms
Bond energetics involve the energy changes associated with the formation and breaking of covalent bonds
Intermolecular forces are attractive or repulsive forces between molecules, which affect physical properties
Covalent Bond Basics Recap
Covalent bonds form when atoms share electrons to achieve a stable octet configuration (8 valence electrons)
Lewis structures represent covalent bonds as shared electron pairs between atoms
Single, double, and triple bonds differ in the number of shared electron pairs (1, 2, or 3 pairs, respectively)
Nonpolar covalent bonds form between atoms with equal electronegativity, resulting in equal sharing of electrons
Polar covalent bonds form between atoms with different electronegativities, resulting in unequal sharing of electrons
The more electronegative atom has a partial negative charge (δ−), while the less electronegative atom has a partial positive charge (δ+)
Electronegativity trends across the periodic table influence the polarity of covalent bonds
Electronegativity generally increases from left to right and decreases from top to bottom in the periodic table
Advanced Bonding Models
Valence Bond Theory (VBT) describes covalent bonding in terms of atomic orbital overlap
Atomic orbitals (s, p, d, f) combine to form bonding and antibonding molecular orbitals
Bonding orbitals have lower energy and increased electron density between the nuclei, stabilizing the molecule
Antibonding orbitals have higher energy and decreased electron density between the nuclei, destabilizing the molecule
Molecular Orbital Theory (MOT) treats molecular orbitals as linear combinations of atomic orbitals (LCAO)
Molecular orbitals are formed by the constructive and destructive interference of atomic orbitals
Bonding molecular orbitals (σ and π) have lower energy and increased electron density between the nuclei
Antibonding molecular orbitals (σ∗ and π∗) have higher energy and decreased electron density between the nuclei
Molecular orbital diagrams represent the relative energies and electron occupancy of molecular orbitals
Electrons fill molecular orbitals in order of increasing energy, following the Aufbau principle and Hund's rule
Bond order is the number of bonding electrons minus the number of antibonding electrons, divided by 2
Higher bond orders indicate stronger and shorter bonds
Molecular Geometry and Hybridization
Molecular geometry refers to the three-dimensional arrangement of atoms in a molecule
VSEPR (Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion) theory predicts molecular geometry based on the number of electron domains (bonding and nonbonding pairs)
Electron domains repel each other and arrange to minimize repulsion, resulting in specific geometries (linear, trigonal planar, tetrahedral, etc.)
Hybridization is the mixing of atomic orbitals to form hybrid orbitals with specific geometries
sp hybridization results in linear geometry (180°)
sp2 hybridization results in trigonal planar geometry (120°)
sp3 hybridization results in tetrahedral geometry (109.5°)
Hybrid orbitals form stronger, more directional bonds compared to unhybridized orbitals
Molecular polarity depends on both bond polarity and molecular geometry
Nonpolar molecules have symmetric geometry and no net dipole moment (CO2, CH4)
Polar molecules have asymmetric geometry and a net dipole moment (H2O, NH3)
Bond Properties and Energetics
Bond length is the average distance between the nuclei of two bonded atoms
Bond length decreases with increasing bond order (single > double > triple)
Bond length increases with increasing atomic size (C-C < C-Si < C-Ge)
Bond strength is the energy required to break a bond (bond dissociation energy)
Bond strength increases with increasing bond order (single < double < triple)
Bond strength decreases with increasing atomic size (C-C > C-Si > C-Ge)
Bond energetics involve the energy changes associated with the formation and breaking of covalent bonds
Bond formation is an exothermic process, releasing energy as the system becomes more stable
Bond breaking is an endothermic process, requiring energy input to overcome the bond dissociation energy
Enthalpy of formation (ΔHf) is the energy change when a compound is formed from its constituent elements in their standard states