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Topic 2.2Chemistry SL55 flashcards

The covalent model

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Card 1 of 552.2.1
2.2.1
Question

What is a covalent bond?

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All Flashcards in Topic 2.2

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2.2.110 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is a covalent bond?

Answer

A **shared pair of electrons** between two (usually non-metal) atoms.

Card 2definition
Question

What is a lone pair?

Answer

A **non-bonding** pair of electrons that stays on one atom (drawn as two dots).

Card 3definition
Question

What does a line represent in a Lewis structure?

Answer

A **bonding pair** (one shared pair of electrons).

Card 4concept
Question

What is the octet rule?

Answer

Atoms tend to gain a full outer shell of **8 electrons** by sharing (or transferring) electrons.

Card 5comparison
Question

Single vs double vs triple bond?

Answer

Number of **shared pairs**: 1, 2, 3 — bond order 1, 2, 3. Higher order → shorter, stronger.

Card 6concept
Question

Lewis structure of CO_{2}?

Answer

O=C=O — **two double bonds**, two lone pairs on each oxygen, none on carbon.

Card 7concept
Question

Lewis structure of N_{2}?

Answer

N≡N — a **triple bond** with **one lone pair on each** nitrogen.

Card 8example
Question

Two common octet-rule exceptions?

Answer

**BF_{3}** (boron has 6 electrons) and **BeCl_{2}** (beryllium has 4) — electron-deficient.

Card 9process
Question

Steps to draw a Lewis structure?

Answer

Count valence electrons → least electronegative atom central → single bonds → complete outer octets → multiple bonds if the centre is short.

Card 10concept
Question

How many lone pairs on N in NH_{3}?

Answer

**One** (three bonding pairs to H, one lone pair).

2.2.210 cards

Card 11definition
Question

What does VSEPR stand for?

Answer

**V**alence **S**hell **E**lectron **P**air **R**epulsion.

Card 12definition
Question

What is an electron domain?

Answer

Any group of electrons around the central atom — a single/double/triple **bond (each = 1 domain)** or a **lone pair**.

Card 13concept
Question

Shape for 2 domains, 0 lone pairs?

Answer

**Linear**, 180° (e.g. CO_{2}, HCN).

Card 14concept
Question

Shape for 3 domains, 0 lone pairs?

Answer

**Trigonal planar**, 120° (e.g. BF_{3}).

Card 15concept
Question

Shape for 4 domains, 0 lone pairs?

Answer

**Tetrahedral**, 109.5° (e.g. CH_{4}).

Card 16concept
Question

Shape for 3 bonds + 1 lone pair?

Answer

**Trigonal pyramidal**, ~107° (e.g. NH_{3}).

Card 17concept
Question

Shape for 2 bonds + 2 lone pairs?

Answer

**Bent**, ~104.5° (e.g. H_{2}O).

Card 18concept
Question

How do lone pairs affect bond angle?

Answer

Lone pairs repel **more** than bonding pairs, so they **reduce** the bond angle.

Card 19concept
Question

Why is CO_{2} linear despite double bonds?

Answer

Each double bond is **one** electron domain; 2 domains, 0 lone pairs → linear, 180°.

Card 20comparison
Question

Order of bond angle: CH_{4}, NH_{3}, H_{2}O?

Answer

CH_{4} (109.5°) > NH_{3} (107°) > H_{2}O (104.5°) — angle falls as lone pairs increase.

2.2.311 cards

Card 21definition
Question

What is electronegativity?

Answer

A measure of how strongly an atom **attracts the shared (bonding) electrons** in a covalent bond.

Card 22concept
Question

What makes a bond polar?

Answer

A **difference in electronegativity** between the two atoms — the electrons are pulled towards the more electronegative atom.

Card 23concept
Question

Which atom becomes δ−?

Answer

The **more electronegative** atom (it gets a bigger share of the electrons); the less electronegative atom is **δ+**.

Card 24comparison
Question

Pure covalent vs polar covalent vs ionic?

Answer

Δχ = 0 → **pure covalent**; small Δχ → **polar covalent** (δ+/δ−); large Δχ → **ionic**.

Card 25definition
Question

What is a bond dipole?

Answer

The small separation of charge (δ+ → δ−) along a polar bond; drawn as an **arrow** pointing to the δ− atom.

Card 26concept
Question

When is a molecule with polar bonds non-polar?

Answer

When the molecule is **symmetrical**, so the bond dipoles **cancel** (e.g. CO_{2}, CCl_{4}, BF_{3}).

Card 27example
Question

Why is CO_{2} non-polar?

Answer

It is **linear** — the two equal C=O dipoles point in opposite directions and **cancel**.

Card 28example
Question

Why is H_{2}O polar?

Answer

It is **bent** (lone pairs on O), so the two O–H dipoles **do not cancel** and give a net dipole.

Card 29example
Question

Does NH_{3} have a net dipole?

Answer

Yes — it is **trigonal pyramidal** (a lone pair on N), so the N–H dipoles do not cancel; NH_{3} is polar.

Card 30concept
Question

What two things must a 'why is X polar?' answer mention?

Answer

(1) the bonds are **polar** (electronegativity difference) and (2) the **shape** means the dipoles **do not cancel**.

Card 31example
Question

Is Cl_{2} polar?

Answer

No — both atoms are identical, so Δχ = 0; the bond is **non-polar** and there is no dipole.

2.2.412 cards

Card 32definition
Question

What is a giant covalent (network) solid?

Answer

A continuous lattice of atoms joined by **covalent bonds** in every direction — there are **no separate small molecules**.

Card 33concept
Question

Why do all giant covalent solids have very high melting points?

Answer

Melting requires breaking **many strong covalent bonds**, which needs a large amount of energy.

Card 34definition
Question

What is an allotrope?

Answer

Different structural forms of the **same element** — e.g. diamond and graphite are both pure carbon.

Card 35concept
Question

How is each carbon bonded in diamond?

Answer

To **four** other carbons in a rigid **3-D tetrahedral** network.

Card 36concept
Question

Why is diamond hard?

Answer

Its **rigid 3-D framework** of strong covalent bonds cannot be pushed out of shape.

Card 37concept
Question

Why does diamond not conduct electricity?

Answer

All **four** outer electrons of each carbon are used in bonds, so there are **no delocalised electrons** to carry charge.

Card 38concept
Question

How is each carbon bonded in graphite?

Answer

To **three** others in flat **layers**; the **fourth** electron is **delocalised**.

Card 39concept
Question

Why does graphite conduct electricity?

Answer

The **delocalised electrons** between the layers are free to move and carry charge.

Card 40concept
Question

Why is graphite soft?

Answer

**Weak forces** between the layers let the **layers slide** over each other (the covalent bonds within a layer stay strong).

Card 41example
Question

Name the four giant covalent solids you must know.

Answer

**Diamond**, **graphite** (carbon allotropes), **silicon (Si)** and **silicon dioxide (SiO_{2})**.

Card 42comparison
Question

Why does a giant covalent solid melt far higher than a molecular solid?

Answer

Giant covalent → break **strong covalent bonds**; molecular → only overcome **weak intermolecular forces**.

Card 43comparison
Question

Diamond vs graphite conductivity — why the difference?

Answer

Diamond uses all 4 electrons in bonds (**no** delocalised e⁻ → no conduction); graphite has **1 delocalised** e⁻ per carbon (conducts).

2.2.512 cards

Card 44definition
Question

What is an intermolecular force?

Answer

A force of attraction **between** separate molecules — much weaker than the covalent bonds **inside** a molecule.

Card 45concept
Question

What sets the boiling point of a molecular substance?

Answer

The strength of its **intermolecular forces** — stronger IMFs need more energy, so a **higher** boiling point.

Card 46comparison
Question

Order the three IMFs by increasing strength.

Answer

**London (dispersion) < dipole–dipole < hydrogen bonding.**

Card 47definition
Question

What are London (dispersion) forces?

Answer

Forces from **temporary, instantaneous dipoles**; present between **all** molecules and the **only** force in non-polar ones.

Card 48concept
Question

What makes London forces stronger?

Answer

**More electrons** (a larger, more polarisable molecule) — so they increase **down a group** and with molecular size.

Card 49definition
Question

When does a molecule have dipole–dipole forces?

Answer

When it is **polar** — it has a **permanent dipole** (δ+ and δ− ends) from an electronegativity difference.

Card 50definition
Question

What is hydrogen bonding?

Answer

The **strongest** IMF: a very δ+ H bonded to **N, O or F** is attracted to a lone pair on the N, O or F of a neighbour.

Card 51concept
Question

Hydrogen bonding only occurs with which atoms?

Answer

Hydrogen bonded directly to **N, O or F** ('H bonds to NOF').

Card 52example
Question

Why does NH_{3} boil much higher than PH_{3}?

Answer

NH_{3} has **hydrogen bonding** (H on N); PH_{3} has only weaker dipole–dipole/London forces.

Card 53concept
Question

Why do alkane/alkene boiling points rise along the series?

Answer

Larger molecules have **more electrons → stronger London forces → higher boiling point**.

Card 54concept
Question

Does boiling water break the O–H bonds?

Answer

**No** — boiling only **separates the molecules** by overcoming intermolecular forces; the covalent bonds stay intact.

Card 55concept
Question

Why is hydrogen bonding stronger than ordinary dipole–dipole?

Answer

N, O and F are very electronegative, so the H is very δ+ and the attraction to a lone pair is especially strong.

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