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Covalent Bonds in Covalent Bonds in Molecular Molecular Compounds Compounds

Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

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Page 1: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Covalent Bonds in Covalent Bonds in Molecular CompoundsMolecular Compounds

Page 2: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

There are two types of covalent bonding

1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons.

2. Polar bonding with an unequal sharing of electrons. The number of shared electrons depends on the number of electrons needed to complete the octet.

Use the END to determine if a bond is polar or non-polar

Page 3: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

• x

Page 4: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

1. Non Polar Bonds• What does polarised/polarity mean?

• Opposites

• Non polar bonding results when two identical atoms equally share electrons between them.

Page 5: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

• Iodine (I2) and oxygen (O2) forms a diatomic (di – two, atomic – atoms) non-polar covalent molecule.

Page 6: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Range from non-polar to polar to ionic bonds- increasing

inequality

Page 7: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

2. Polar Bonds• Polarized bonds occur in covalent molecules.

One atom has greater electronegativity and therefore has a partial (slight) negative charge because it attracts the bonding electrons more strongly (remember electrons have a –ive charge).

• The other atom has a slight

positive charge.

• Overall, we can say that the

molecule has a dipole

Page 8: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Partial positive is represent by this symbol

Partial negative is represented By this symbol

Page 9: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Which is more electronegative H or Cl?

• Cl has greater electronegativity

• The bonding electrons therefore spend more time near the Cl atom

• So the Cl side of the molecule becomes slightly negative (partial negative

charge) and the H side becomes

slightly positive making a

polarised bond

• What about HF?

Page 10: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Polar Molecules• Polar molecules are those containing polar

bonds that do not cancel each other out• Molecular polarity is dependent on the

difference in electronegativity between atoms in a compound and the asymmetry of the compound's structure.

• For example, a molecule of water is polar because of the unequal sharing of its electrons in a "bent" structure, whereas methane is considered non-polar because the carbon shares the hydrogen atoms uniformly.

Page 11: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Polar

• The covalent bond between HCl is said to be polarized and the molecule is called a polar molecule

• It is also said to have a dipole

• because is has two charged ends

Page 12: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Intermolecular force: dipole-dipole

• When a molecule has a dipole, other molecules of the chemical nearby also have a dipole….they are thus attracted to each other because of electrostatic forces.

• Between polar molecules, there is a dipole-dipole force. The force between the molecules affects its physical and chemical properties.

• An example is that it increases its m.p. and b.p.

Page 13: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Non polar molecules• 1- Non polar molecules are those that contain only

non-polar bonds

OR• 2- Polar molecules in which polar bonds cancel each

other out

• Cancellation of

charge is the

result of the shape of

the molecule

Page 14: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Which shapes do you recognize?Which shapes are asymmetrical?

• x

Page 15: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Youtube clip

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQwpb5jyMq8

Page 16: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Quiz

• What happens to the electrons in a polar bonds?

• How do you know if a bond is polar?

• What is a non polar molecule?

• What is a dipole?

• What is the symbol for slightly negative?

• Can non polar molecules have polar bonds?

Page 17: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

How to determine polar moleculesThere are two important factors

1. The polarity of the individual bonds in the molecule;

2. The shape or geometry of the molecule.

Steps to take

1. Determine if a given individual bond is polar, Look at the difference between electronegativity of the atoms in the periodic table. If the difference is:

0.4 ≤ non polar

›0.4 -1.7 = polar

Page 18: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

b) Determine the shape of molecule. Then there are 3 options

i) if all bonds are non-polar, then the whole molecule is non-polar regardless of its shape.

ii) If there are polar bonds and there is symmetry in the molecule so that the polarity of the bonds cancels out, then the molecule is non-polar. (symmetry around the central atom)

iii) If there are polar bonds but there is no symmetry, the overall molecule is polar.

Page 19: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding
Page 20: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Which molecules are polar?

Page 21: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Determine if BF3 is polar or non polar

• B-F • 1- bonds are polar • 2- but they are symmetrically arranged

(trigonal planar) around the central boron atom. No side of the molecule has more negative or positive charge than another side, and so the molecule is nonpolar.

Page 22: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Predict whether the following molecules are polar or nonpolar:

(a) BrCl; • (a-1) Chlorine is more electronegative than bromine• END= 0.8 - bond is polar• a-2 Br-Cl is linear….consequently, BrCl molecule

will be polar with chlorine carrying the partial negative charge:

Page 23: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Predict whether the following molecules are polar or nonpolar:

(b) SO2 • (b-1) Because oxygen is more electronegative than

sulfur, the molecule has polar bonds.• END= 0.8 • (b-2) VSEPR predicts a bent shape. The bond

dipoles do not cancel and the molecule is polar

Page 24: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Which of the following molecules contains polar bonds but is nonpolar?

a) H2O

b) NH3

c) F2

d) CCl4e) CH2Cl2

Page 25: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

• In CCl4, there are 4 bonds arranged symmetrically around the central carbon atom.

• Each bond is polar, you can tell due to the electronegativity differences between carbon and chlorine.

• Because the 4 atoms of chlorine are arranged symmetrically, the polarity of the bonds cancel each other out, making a non-polar molecule.

Page 26: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Determine if OF2 is polar or non polar

• The electronegativities of oxygen and fluorine, 3.44 and 3.98, respectively, produce a 0.54 difference that leads us to predict that the O-F bonds are polar. The molecular geometry of OF2 is bent. Such an asymmetrical distribution of polar bonds would produce a polar molecule.

Page 27: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

• When there are no polar bonds in a molecule, there is no permanent charge difference between one part of the molecule and another… thus the molecule is nonpolar. (ALWAYS)

Page 28: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

What is the difference between a polar bond and a polar molecule?

• A polar bond is a charged bond. There is a positive and negative end that do not cancel each other out relative to the bond only

• A polar molecule contains polar bonds that do not cancel each other out overall within the molecule

Page 29: Covalent Bonds in Molecular Compounds. There are two types of covalent bonding 1. Non-polar bonding with an equal sharing of electrons. 2. Polar bonding

Why is it important to determine if a molecule is polar or non-polar?

• A polar molecule has partially charged ends…in some ways this is like ionic compounds…this means that a polar molecule will have– Higher mp, higher bp,– Higher solubility in water– Higher conductivity

• Than non-polar molecules