1 / 46

Homonuclear & Heteronuclear bonds

Homonuclear & Heteronuclear bonds. Hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ). Hydrazine (N 2 H 4 ). Ethane (C 2 H 6 ). Homonuclear bonds. Hetronuclear bonds. Polar bonds. IONIC COMPOUNDS.

misu
Download Presentation

Homonuclear & Heteronuclear bonds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Homonuclear & Heteronuclear bonds Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) Hydrazine (N2H4) Ethane (C2H6) Homonuclear bonds Hetronuclear bonds

  2. Polar bonds

  3. IONIC COMPOUNDS Salt crystals are repeating patterns of positive+ cations and negative- anions held together by electrostatic attraction.

  4. COVALENT COMPOUNDS Biological molecules are covalently bound Most consist of the non-metals Carbon, Oxygen, Hydrogen, and Nitrogen.

  5. SO….. Ionic and covalent bonds are very different, but how do we predict if a bond will be ionic or covalent?

  6. electronegativity The ELECTRONEGATIVITY of an element helps us understand the difference between ionic and covalent bonding • Electronegativity is the measure of the ability of an atom in a bond to attract electrons.

  7. With only a few exceptions, electronegativity values increase as you move from left to right in any period of the periodic table. • Within any group, electronegativity values decrease as you go down the group.

  8. That means that the most electronegative elements are in the upper-right corner of the table.

  9. Every element has an electronegativity value Francium has the lowest electronegativity 0.7 Fluorine has the highest 4.0

  10. Elements with a HIGH electronegativity have a STRONG pull on electrons. Elements with a LOW electronegativity have a WEAK pull on electrons.

  11. difference in electronegativity When two atoms bond their DIFFERENCE in electronegativity determines the bond type. A large difference in electronegativity means one atom will win the “tug of war” andtake the electrons completely. This is an ionic bond.

  12. When the electronegativity of two bonding atoms is very similar, neither atom wins the “tug of war” and the electrons are shared equally. This produces a covalent bond

  13. In a true covalent bond electrons are shared equally

  14. IONIC COVALENT Transfer electrons Share electrons Between an atom of high electronegativity and an atom of low electronegativity Between two atoms of equal or very close electronegativities NaCl N2

  15. If the electronegativity difference between two bonded atoms is very high the bond is ionic. If the electronegativity difference is very low the bond is covalent. What if the difference in electronegativity between the two bonded atoms is in-between?

  16. A POLAR COVALENT BOND occurs when two atoms share electrons unequally. The atom with a high electronegativity value holds the bonding electrons more often, but it doesn’t remove the electrons completely.

  17. Are the bonds polar covalent, non-polar covalent, or ionic? 1) H-C 2) K-Cl 3) O-F 4) Cl-Cl 5) C-N 6) S-O 7) B-S

  18. A polar bond has a partial positive charge (+) and a partial negative charge (-)

  19. The N-H bond is polar, with N being the most electronegative.

  20. - + + + The N-H bond is polar, with N being the most electronegative.

  21. Bond polarity and 3D shape determine if a molecule is polar Bond polarity --- When a bond has a partial negative charge on one atom and a partial positive charge on the other atom. Molecule shape--- the arrangement of atoms in three dimensions (3-D)

  22. A polar molecule has polar bonds and asymmetry Polar bonds Polar molecule Asymmetry- has different sides Polar bonds Non-polar molecule Symmetry- all sides are the same δ- δ- Positive side δ+ δ+ negative side δ- δ- δ-

  23. If the electrons are not distributed equally, the molecule is said to be polar. The molecule has a negative end and a positive end.

  24. Polar molecules are affected by electric fields

  25. It has two poles and is polar; it has a measurable dipole moment.

  26. POLAR MOLECULES INTERACT!! A partial positive charge (+) is attracted to negative ions and negative partial charges (-) of other polar bonds.

  27. POLAR MOLECULES INTERACT!! A partial negative charge (-) is attracted to positive ions and partial positive charges (+) of other polar bonds. +

  28. Water is a molecule that consists of two polar covalent O-H bonds.

  29. The electrons are not distributed evenly so the water molecule is polar. The negative end of the molecule is the oxygen end. O is more electronegative than H and pulls the negative electrons toward itself. Also, there are two lone pairs around oxygen. negative end positive end

  30. Na+(aq) A dissolved sodium ion

  31. Practice- Draw the 3D structures for these molecules and label the bond polarity and the molecule polarity. • H2O • CH4 • CH3F • CH3CH3 • CH3CH2OH • 6. NH3 7. CO2 8. CH2CH2 9. HCN 10. 11.

More Related