molecules are only 90°. Most AB 4 molecules are tetrahedral, however, with larger bond
angles (109.5°) and greater separation of valence electron pairs around A.
C. Valence Bond Theory
According to VB theory, each Group IVA atom (C in our example) must make four equiv-
alent orbitals available for bonding. To do this, C forms four sp^3 hybrid orbitalsby mixing
the sand all three porbitals in its outer (n2) shell. This results in four unpaired elec-
trons.
These sp^3 hybrid orbitals are directed toward the corners of a regular tetrahedron, which
has a 109.5° angle from any corner to the center to any other corner.
2 p
sp^3
2 s
C[He] hybridize C[He]
8-7 Tetrahedral Electronic Geometry: AB 4 Species (No Lone Pairs of Electrons on A) 321
Each of the four atoms that bond to C has a half-filled atomic orbital; these can overlap
the half-filled sp^3 hybrid orbitals, as is illustrated for CH 4 and CF 4.
C+C+ C + C C
109.5°
2 p
four sp^3 hybrid
orbitals
2 s
F
F F
F
C
Unshared
pairs on
F atoms are
not shown
H
H
H
H
C
H
1 s 2 p
CH 4 CF 4
See the Saunders Interactive
General Chemistry CD-ROM,
Screen 10.4, Hybrid Orbitals. Be sure to
see the animation of sp^3 orbital
formation on that screen. See also the
hybridization tool in Screen 10.6,
which you can use to build hybrid
orbitals.
See the Saunders Interactive
General Chemistry CD-ROM,
Screen 10.5, Sigma Bonds.