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Electronegativity and Polarity

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... within a group Linus Pauling Developed scale of electronegativity Figure 9-15, pg 263 Fluorine has the highest: 3.98 Francium has the lowest: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electronegativity and Polarity


1
Electronegativity and Polarity
  • Section 9-5

2
Electron affinity
  • Tendency of atom to accept electron
  • Usually increases as atomic numbers increase
    within period
  • Usually decreases as atomic number increases
    within a group

3
Linus Pauling
  • Developed scale of electronegativity
  • Figure 9-15, pg 263
  • Fluorine has the highest 3.98
  • Francium has the lowest 0.7
  • Noble gases are not given (0)

4
Electron Affinity tells us
  • Character and type of bond
  • Never completely ionic or covalent
  • Sharing is not always completely equal

5
Ionic Bond
  • Large differences in electronegativity indicate
    that electrons are transferred

6
Nonpolar covalent bonds
  • Difference in electron affinity of atoms involved
    is very small
  • Electrons shared fairly equally

7
Identical Atoms
  • Difference in electronegativity is 0
  • Electrons are shared equally.

8
Polar Covalent Bonds
  • Unequal sharing
  • Electron tug-of-war
  • Stronger affinity greater strength

9
Differences
  • Less than 0.4 nonpolar covalent bond
  • 0.4 1.7 polar covalent bond
  • Greater than 1.7 ionic bond

10
Examples
  • H and Br
  • 2.20 and 2.96 0.76 polar covalent
  • C and O
  • 2.55 and 3.44 0.89 polar covalent
  • Li and F
  • 0.98 and 3.98 3.00 ionic bond

11
Solubility of Polar Molecules
  • Like dissolves like
  • Polar (and ionic) compounds are soluble in polar
    substances
  • Nonpolar only soluble in non-polar substances

12
Properties of Covalent Compounds
  • Van der Waals forces weak forces of attraction
    between individual molecules

13
Types of Intermolecular Forces
  • Nonpolar
  • Weak attraction
  • Dispersion or induced dipole
  • Polar
  • Stronger attraction
  • Dipole-dipole force
  • Hydrogen bond
  • Very strong
  • Between H and another dipole

14
Physical properties
  • Melting/boiling points lower than ionic
  • Many are gases at room temp
  • Non-conductors of heat or electricity
  • Extremely hard
  • Due to the intermolecular forces!!
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