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Title: The Octet Rule, Electronegativity, Bonding and Molecular Orbitals
Description: This packed summary tells us about the octet rule in valence electrons, the electronegativity of an atom and what that means for bonding and how different orbitals arise when bonds are made to form compounds and molecules

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Module: BIOM - 1007

Lecturer: Dr Bhambra

Date: 11/10/16

The Octet Rule, Electronegativity, Bonding and Molecular Orbitals
o

The bonds in compounds are formed during the redistribution of valence electrons
 Protons and neutrons never participate in bonding
 The most stable atoms have full valence shells
 Only a few elements exist with full shells, the noble gases
 This is why they are highly unreactive

o

A compound has a much more stable distribution of atoms compared to separate atomic components
 In oxygen for example, 2 electrons are shared from each oxygen atom’s valence shell to fill both, as
seen here:

o

We
full s

only
consider
and p
orbitals
terms of a

in
full valence shell, because of this, only 8 electrons are needed for any given shell
 The Octet Rule states that an atom seeks to gain a full valence shell with 8 electrons
 Exceptions to this are H (1e-) and He (2e-)
o

A valence shell can be represented using Lewis Dot Symbols
 This is a series of dots that surround the chemical symbol
 The dots are placed on the 4 sides of the symbol to show the 4 orbitals (1s and 3p)
 When adding dots to show a bond, the free spaces are filled up first, then the space next to it
 The following is a diagram of some Lewis dot symbols:

o

Covalent bonds are when one or more pairs of electrons are shared equally between atoms whereas
an ionic bond is when one or more electrons is transferred to another atom




The type of bonding that occurs is dependent upon the electronegativity () of elements, this is
an indication of how strongly an atom of an element can attract an electron
experiences periodicity and increases as you move across a period, left to right
 If the difference in is less than 1
...
7 then the bond will be ionic
 This is because the pull from the strong electronegative is too much for the weak
electronegative and so the electron will be completely transferred
 The electron configuration changes in an ionic bond, an example is sodium
(0
...
0):

o

Valence shells
may contain
orbitals with
unpaired electrons
or that are fully
occupied (Pauli
exclusion
principal)
deemed non These are
bonding
or lone pairs of
electron
 These electrons still do play a role in showing the structure of the molecule however

o

There are instances that, during a covalent bond, both electrons come from the same atom, this is
termed a dative/coordinate covalent bond
 One example is an ammonium ion, Nitrogen contributes a complete valence pair, for
sharing with the H+ ion
...
This holds the 4 sub units together

o
The sharing of valence electrons between
atoms occurs through an overlap of atomic orbitals containing these electrons: These are now known as
molecular orbitals





More electrons must be present in bonding than anti-bonding orbitals
 Non-bonding orbitals also exist but don’t directly affect the formation of covalent bonds,
they are occupied by non-bonding electrons
The following image is what occurs:

o

There are two types of molecular orbital:
 Sigma (σ)
 Pi (π)

o

Both orbitals have a distinctive shape and are
involved in forming covalent bonds
 The image below shows the shape of sigma
and pi orbitals:





The sharing of one pair of electrons occupy the sigma orbital
A double bond, two pairs of electrons between two atoms, is shared, one occupies a sigma
orbital and one occupy a pi orbital
Finally, a triple bond is shared: one occupies a sigma orbital and 2 pairs occupy 2 pi orbitals


Title: The Octet Rule, Electronegativity, Bonding and Molecular Orbitals
Description: This packed summary tells us about the octet rule in valence electrons, the electronegativity of an atom and what that means for bonding and how different orbitals arise when bonds are made to form compounds and molecules