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Figure 12.8: Positions (centers) of the ions
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səhifə | 3/5 | tarix | 26.04.2023 | ölçüsü | 1,49 Mb. | | #102846 |
| Chem Chap 12 pp
Figure 12.8: Positions (centers) of the ions. Figure 12.9: Relative sizes of some ions and their parent atoms. - Cation – always smaller than parent atom
- Anion – always larger than parent atom
Polyatomic Ions - Atoms in ion are held together by covalent bonds
- All atoms behave as one unit
Lewis Structures - Bonding involves just valence electrons
- Lewis Structure: representation of a molecule that shows how the valence electrons are arranged among the atoms in the molecule
- Named after G.N. Lewis – came up with idea while lecturing Chemistry class in 1902
Lewis Structures - Only include valence electrons
- Use dots to represent electrons
- Hydrogen and Helium follow duet rule
- Octet Rule: eight electrons required – atoms can share
- Bonding pair = shared electrons
- Lone pairs/unshared pairs: electrons not involved in bonding
Steps for Writing Lewis Structures - Obtain sum of valence electrons from all atoms.
- Use one pair of electrons to form bond between each pair of atoms (can use line to represent 2 bonding electrons instead of dots)
- Arrange remaining electrons to satisfy duet or octet rule (there are exceptions to the octet rule)
Multiple Bonds - Single bond: 2 atoms sharing one electron pair
- Double bond: 2 atoms sharing two pairs of electrons
- Triple bond: three electron pairs are shared
- Resonance: more than one Lewis structure can be drawn for the molecule
- Insert multiple bonds to satisfy octet rule
Molecular Structure - aka Geometric Structure
- 3-D arrangement of the atoms in a molecule
- Example: water molecule
- Bent or V-shaped
- Describe precisely using bond angle = 105° for H2O
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