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ChemistryPC

Chemical Bonding & Molecular Structure

Apply concepts from Chemical Bonding & Molecular Structure to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.

3-4 Qs/year60 minPhase 1 · APPLICATION

Concept Core

Chemical bonding explains how atoms combine to form stable molecules. Ionic bonding involves electron transfer from metals to non-metals, forming a crystal lattice stabilized by electrostatic attraction. Lattice enthalpy quantifies this stability and can be calculated using the Born-Haber cycle: ΔHfH_{f} = ΔHsubH_{sub} + ½ΔHdissH_{diss} + IE + EA + U (lattice energy). Fajan's rules predict covalent character in ionic bonds: covalent character increases with small cation size, large anion size, and high cation charge (greater polarization).

Covalent bonding involves electron sharing. Dipole moment μ = q × d (units: Debye; 1 D = 3.336 × 10⁻³⁰ C·m). Symmetric molecules have μ = 0 (CO₂ linear, BF₃ trigonal planar, CCl₄ tetrahedral) because individual bond dipoles cancel by vector addition. Dimensional analysis: μ = q × d → C × m = C·m ✓

VSEPR theory predicts molecular geometry from electron pair repulsion around the central atom. Lone pair repulsion order: lp-lp > lp-bp > bp-bp, which compresses bond angles. Key shapes: linear (AB₂, 180°), trigonal planar (AB₃, 120°), tetrahedral (AB₄, 109.5°), trigonal bipyramidal (AB₅), octahedral (AB₆, 90°). With lone pairs: AB₃E = trigonal pyramidal, AB₂E₂ = bent, AB₄E₂ = square planar.

Hybridization is determined by the steric number (σ\sigma bonds + lone pairs): sp (2, linear), sp² (3, trigonal planar), sp³ (4, tetrahedral), sp³d (5, trigonal bipyramidal), sp³d² (6, octahedral). VBT describes σ\sigma bonds (head-on overlap) and π\pi bonds (lateral overlap): single = 1σ, double = 1σ + 1π, triple = 1σ + 2π.

Solved Example 1: Shape and hybridization of XeF₄. Xe valence electrons = 8; bonds to 4 F atoms; lone pairs = (8 − 4)/2 = 2 (considering expanded octet: 4 bond pairs + 2 lone pairs = 6 pairs). Steric number = 6 → hybridization = sp³d². Shape = square planar (lone pairs occupy axial positions to minimize lp-lp repulsion).

Solved Example 2: Bond order of O₂⁻ (superoxide). Electronic configuration: σ1s² σ1s² σ2s² σ2s² σ2p² π2p⁴ π2p³ BO = (Nb − Na)/2 = (10 − 7)/2 = 1.5. O₂⁻ is paramagnetic (1 unpaired electron in π2p).

Solved Example 3: Lattice energy of NaCl using Born-Haber cycle. Given: ΔHfH_{f} = −411, ΔHsubH_{sub}(Na) = 108, IE(Na) = 496, ½ΔHdissH_{diss}(Cl₂) = 121, EA(Cl) = −349 kJ/mol. U = ΔHfH_{f} − ΔHsubH_{sub} − IE − ½ΔHdissH_{diss} − EA = −411 − 108 − 496 − 121 − (−349) = −787 kJ/mol

MOT uses LCAO to form bonding (σ, π) and antibonding (σ*, π*) MOs. Bond order = (Nb − Na)/2. For Z ≤ 7 (B₂, C₂, N₂): σ2p lies ABOVE π2p (mixing). For Z > 7 (O₂, F₂): σ2p lies BELOW π2p (normal order). O₂ is paramagnetic (2 unpaired e⁻ in π*2p) — a key MOT success that VBT fails to predict.

Resonance involves delocalization of electrons (e.g., benzene, SMILES: c1ccccc1; ozone, SMILES: [O-][O+]=O). Hydrogen bonding (H bonded to F, O, N) affects boiling points; metallic bonding (electron sea model) explains conductivity.

The key testable concept is VSEPR shape prediction using steric number and MOT bond order calculations for diatomic species.

Key Testable Concept

The key testable concept is **VSEPR shape prediction using steric number and MOT bond order calculations for diatomic species**.

Comparison Tables

A) VSEPR Shapes

Total PairsBond PairsLone PairsHybridizationShapeBond AngleExample
220spLinear180°BeCl₂, CO₂
330sp²Trigonal planar120°BF₃, SO₃
321sp²Bent/V-shape~117°SO₂, SnCl₂
440sp³Tetrahedral109.5°CH₄, CCl₄
431sp³Trigonal pyramidal~107°NH₃, PCl₃
422sp³Bent/V-shape~104.5°H₂O, H₂S
550sp³dTrigonal bipyramidal90°/120°PCl₅
541sp³dSee-saw~90°/~120°SF₄
532sp³dT-shape~90°ClF₃
523sp³dLinear180°XeF₂
660sp³d²Octahedral90°SF₆
651sp³d²Square pyramidal~90°BrF₅, IF₅
642sp³d²Square planar90°XeF₄

B) Hybridization Summary

TypeGeometryBond AngleExample Molecules
spLinear180°BeCl₂, C₂H₂ (SMILES: C#C), CO₂
sp²Trigonal planar120°BF₃, C₂H₄ (SMILES: C=C), graphite
sp³Tetrahedral109.5°CH₄, NH₃ (107°), H₂O (104.5°)
sp³dTrigonal bipyramidal90°/120°PCl₅, SF₄
sp³d²Octahedral90°SF₆, XeF₄

C) MO Filling Order

For Z ≤ 7 (with mixing)For Z > 7 (without mixing)
σ1s < σ1s < σ2s < σ2s < π2p < σ2p < π2p < σ2pσ1s < σ1s < σ2s < σ2s < σ2p < π2p < π2p < σ2p
Examples: B₂, C₂, N₂Examples: O₂, F₂, Ne₂
π2p is filled BEFORE σ2pσ2p is filled BEFORE π2p

D) Bond Order & Properties

SpeciesBond OrderMagnetic NatureBond Length Order
N₂3DiamagneticShortest (triple bond)
O₂2Paramagnetic (2 unpaired e⁻)Moderate
O₂⁻1.5Paramagnetic (1 unpaired e⁻)Longer than O₂
O₂²⁻1DiamagneticLongest
F₂1DiamagneticLong (single bond)
Ne₂0Does not exist

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