Polarity Notes

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Polarity Notes

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Polarity Notes. February 5, 2014. Students will be able to define and identify: B ond polarity and overall molecular polarity I ntermolecular forces. Lewis/Polarity/IMF/Geometry Lab Video of the day: The Big Three Methane Water Ammonia. Introduction : Polarity. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Polarity Notes

Page 1: Polarity Notes

Polarity Notes

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February 5, 2014

• Students will be able to define and identify: – Bond polarity and overall molecular polarity– Intermolecular forces.

• Lewis/Polarity/IMF/Geometry Lab

• Video of the day: The Big Three– Methane– Water– Ammonia

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Introduction: Polarity

• Polarity is a concentration of charge on one side of a bond

• Some molecules have negative or positive poles, like magnets

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Individual bond polarity• Polarity is determined by electronegativity

difference • To draw individual bond polarity:– Compare: Only two atoms at a time– The more electronegative atom attracts electrons

more– Draw arrow towards the more electronegative atom

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_M9khs87xQ8

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Review: Electronegativity

• Electronegativity is the measure of how well an atom in a bond attracts electrons

• Electronegativity increases up and right across the periodic table

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Are there lone pairs on the center atom?

Yes No

Polar Are the peripheral (outer) atoms

different?

Yes No

Polar Nonpolar

Overall Polarity

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Bond Polarity Examples

Cl2

• Cl has the same electronegativity as Cl. We cannot draw an arrow to show polarity.

• The molecule is nonpolar.

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Polarity Examples

• CH3I

• C has a higher electronegativity than H. We draw arrows from each H towards C.

• I has a higher electronegativity than C. We draw an arrow from C towards I.

• There are no lone pairs around the central atom and the outer atoms are different. The molecule is POLAR.

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Polarity Examples• CH2O

• C has a higher electronegativity than H. We draw arrows from each H towards C.

• O has a higher electronegativity than C. We draw an arrow from C towards O.• There are no lone pairs around the central atom and the outer atoms are

different. The molecule is POLAR.

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Polarity Examples

• O3

• O has the same electronegativity as O. We cannot draw arrows to show polarity.

• The central atom has a lone pair, so the molecule is polar.

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Polarity Examples

• PF3

• F is more electronegative than P. We draw an arrow from P to each of the fluorine atoms.

• The central atom has a lone pair, so the molecule is polar.

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Polarity Examples

• NH4+

• N is more electronegative than H. We draw an arrow from each H towards N.

• The central atom doesn’t have a lone pair, and the outer atoms are the same so the molecule is nonpolar.