Chemistry (Chang), 9th EditionChapter 10:
Chemical Bonding II- Molecular Geometry and Hybridization of Atomic OrbitalsChapter Summary1. The VSEPR model for predicting molecular geometry is based on the assumption that
valence-shell electron pairs repel one another and tend to stay as far apart as possible.
2. According to the VSEPR model, molecular geometry can be predicted from the
number of bonding electron pairs and lone pairs. Lone pairs repel other pairs
more forcefully than bonding pairs do and thus distort bond angles from the
ideal geometry.
3. Dipole moment is a measure of the charge separation in molecules containing
atoms of different electronegativities. The dipole moment of a molecule is the
resultant of whatever bond moments are present. Information about molecular
geometry can be obtained from dipole moment measurements.
4. There are two quantum mechanical explanations for covalent bond formation:
valence bond theory and molecular orbital theory. In valence bond theory,
hybridized atomic orbitals are formed by the combination and rearrangement of
orbitals from the same atom. The hybridized orbitals are all of equal energy and
electron density, and the number of hybridized orbitals is equal to the number of
pure atomic orbitals that combine.
5. Valence-shell expansion can be explained by assuming hybridization of s, p, and d orbitals.
6. In sp hybridization, the two hybrid orbitals lie in a straight line; in sp2 hybridization, the three hybrid orbitals are directed toward the corners of a triangle; in sp3 hybridization, the four hybrid orbitals are directed toward the corners of a tetrahedron; in sp3d hybridization, the five hybrid orbitals are directed toward the corners of a trigonal bipyramid; in sp3d2 hybridization, the six hybrid orbitals are
directed toward the corners of an octahedron.
7. In an sp2-hybridized atom (for example, carbon), the one unhybridized p orbital can form a pi bond with another p orbital. A carbon-carbon double bond consists of a sigma bond and a pi bond. In an sp-hybridized carbon atom, the two unhybridized p orbitals can form two pi bonds with two p orbitals on another atom (or atoms). A carbon-carbon triple bond consists of one sigma bond and two pi bonds.
8. Molecular orbital theory describes bonding in terms of the combination and
rearrangement of atomic orbitals to form orbitals that are associated with the
molecule as a whole.
9. Bonding molecular orbitals increase electron density between the nuclei and are
lower in energy than individual atomic orbitals. Antibonding molecular orbitals
have a region of zero electron density between the nuclei, and an energy level
higher than that of the individual atomic orbitals.
10. We write electron configurations for molecular orbitals as we do for atomic orbitals,
filling in electrons in the order of increasing energy levels. The number of molecular
orbitals always equals the number of atomic orbitals that were combined. The Pauli
exclusion principle and Hund’s rule govern the filling of molecular orbitals.
11. Molecules are stable if the number of electrons in bonding molecular orbitals is
greater than that in antibonding molecular orbitals.
12. Delocalized molecular orbitals, in which electrons are free to move around a whole
molecule or group of atoms, are formed by electrons in p orbitals of adjacent
atoms. Delocalized molecular orbitals are an alternative to resonance structures in
explaining observed molecular properties. |