CK-12-Chemistry Intermediate

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

http://www.ck12.org Chapter 9. Covalent Bonding



  • Exceptions to the octet rule include incomplete octets, odd-electron molecules, and expanded octets.

  • Bond energy is the energy required to break a covalent bond. The most stable and unreactive molecules contain
    bonds with high bond energies.


Lesson Review Questions


Reviewing Concepts



  1. Identify the compounds below as being most likely ionic or molecular.
    a. CaBr 2
    b. PCl 3
    c. H 2 S
    d. ZnO

  2. Describe the difference between ionic and covalent bonds.

  3. Describe the attractive and repulsive forces that occur as two atoms approach one another and form a covalent
    bond.

  4. How many electrons are shared between atoms in a single covalent bond? In a double covalent bond? In a
    triple covalent bond?

  5. How does the bond length between the oxygen atoms in an ozone molecule compare to the bond lengths of
    oxygen-oxygen single and double bonds? Explain.

  6. Which elements are capable of exceeding the octet rule when forming covalent bonds. Why?


Problems



  1. Draw Lewis structures for the following molecules, each of which follows the octet rule.
    a. H 2 S
    b. PCl 3
    c. HCN
    d. H 2 CO
    e. OF 2
    f. BrCl
    g. CS 2
    h. C 2 H 6

  2. Draw Lewis structures for the following polyatomic ions.
    a. SO 32 −
    b. OH−
    c. PO 43 −

  3. Draw all resonance structures for the carbonate ion, CO 32 −.

  4. Compounds that contain a C–N and/or a C–O bond are capable of forming a coordinate covalent bond with
    the H+ion. Compounds that only contain C–C and C–H bonds cannot. Explain this observation.

  5. Draw Lewis structures for the following molecules. Which do not follow the octet rule?
    a. AlH 3
    b. SF 4
    c. BeCl 2
    d. SCl 2
    e. NO

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