Which of these atoms cannot serve as a central atom in a Lewis structure: (a) O; (b) He; (c) F; (d) H; (e) P? Explain
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Textbook Solutions for Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change
Question
Determine the shape, ideal bond angle(s), and the direction of any deviation from these angles for each of the following: (a) ClO3 (b) IF4 (c) SeOF2 (d) TeF5 1
Solution
The first step in solving 10 problem number 41 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: Determine the shape, ideal bond angle(s), and the direction of any deviation from these angles for each of the following: (a) ClO3 (b) IF4 (c) SeOF2 (d) TeF5 1
From the textbook chapter The Shapes of Molecules you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.
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full solution
Solution: Determine the shape, ideal bond angle(s), and the
Chapter 10 textbook questions
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
When is a resonance hybrid needed to adequately depict the bonding in a molecule? Using NO as an example, explain how a resonance hybrid is consistent with the actual bond length, bond strength, and bond order
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
In which of these bonding patterns does X obey the octet rule? X (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) X X X X X X X
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
What is required for an atom to expand its valence shell? Which of the following atoms can expand its valence shell: F, S, H, Al, Se, Cl?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for (a) SiF4; (b) SeCl2; (c) COF (C is central).
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for (a) PH ; ? (b) CF; (c) SbH.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for (a) PF3; (b) H2CO3 (both H atoms are attached to O atoms); (c) CS2.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for (a) CH4S; (b) S2Cl2; (c) CHCl3.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw Lewis structures of all the important resonance forms of (a) NO2 ?; (b) NO2F (N is central).
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw Lewis structures of all the important resonance forms of (a) HNO3 (HONO2); (b) HAsO4 2 (HOAsO3 2).
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw Lewis structures of all the important resonance forms of (a) N3 ; (b) NO2
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw Lewis structures of all the important resonance forms of (a) HCO2 (H is attached to C); (b) HBrO4 (HOBrO3).
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw the Lewis structure with lowest formal charges, and determine the charge of each atom in (a) IF5; (b) AlH4 .
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw the Lewis structure with lowest formal charges, and determine the charge of each atom in (a) OCS; (b) NO
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw the Lewis structure with lowest formal charges, and determine the charge of each atom in (a) CN; (b) ClO.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw the Lewis structure with lowest formal charges, and determine the charge of each atom in (a) BF4 ; (b) ClNO.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for a resonance form of each ion with the lowest possible formal charges, show the charges, and give oxidation numbers of the atoms: (a) BrO3 ; (b) SO3 2.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for a resonance form of each ion with the lowest possible formal charges, show the charges, and give oxidation numbers of the atoms: (a) AsO4 3; (b) ClO2 .
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
These species do not obey the octet rule. Draw a Lewis structure for each, and state the type of octet- rule exception: (a) BH3 (b) AsF4 (c) SeCl4
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
These species do not obey the octet rule. Draw a Lewis structure for each, and state the type of octet- rule exception: (a) PF6 (b) ClO3 (c) H3PO3 (one PH bond)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
These species do not obey the octet rule. Draw a Lewis structure for each, and state the type of octet- rule exception: (a) BrF3 (b) ICl2 (c) BeF2
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
These species do not obey the octet rule. Draw a Lewis structure for each, and state the type of octet- rule exception: (a) O3 (b) XeF2 (c) SbF4 P
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Molten beryllium chloride reacts with chloride ion from molten NaCl to form the BeCl4 2 ion, in which the Be atom attains an octet. Show the net ionic reaction with Lewis Structure
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Despite many attempts, the perbromate ion (BrO4 ) was not prepared in the laboratory until about 1970. (In fact, articles were published explaining theoretically why it could never be prepared!) Draw a Lewis structure for BrO4 in which all atoms have lowest formal charges.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Cryolite (Na3AlF6) is an indispensable component in the electrochemical manufacture of aluminum. Draw a Lewis structure for the AlF6 3 ion.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Phosgene is a colorless, highly toxic gas employed against troops in World War I and used today as a key reactant in organic syntheses. From the following resonance structures, select the one with the lowest formal charges:
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
If you know the formula of a molecule or ion, what is the first step in predicting its shape?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
In what situation is the name of the molecular shape the same as the name of the electron-group arrangement?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Which of the following numbers of electron groups can give rise to a bent (V-shaped) molecule: two, three, four, five, six? Draw an example for each case, showing the shape classification (AXmEn) and the ideal bond angle.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Name all the molecular shapes that have a tetrahedral electron-group arrangement.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Consider the following molecular shapes: (a) Which has the most electron pairs (both shared and unshared) around the central atom? (b) Which has the most unshared pairs around the central atom? (c) Do any have only shared pairs around the central atom?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Use wedge-bond perspective drawings (if necessary) to sketch the atom positions in a general molecule of formula (not shape class) AXn that has each of the following shapes: (a) V shaped (b) trigonal planar (c) trigonal bipyramidal (d) T shaped (e) trigonal pyramidal (f) square pyramidal
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
What would you expect to be the electron-group arrangement around atom A in each of the following cases? For each arrangement, give the ideal bond angle and the direction of any expected deviation:
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the electron-group arrangement, molecular shape, and ideal bond angle(s) for each of the following: (a) O3 (b) H3O? (c) NF3
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the electron-group arrangement, molecular shape, and ideal bond angle(s) for each of the following: (a) SO4 (b) NO2 (c) PH3
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the electron-group arrangement, molecular shape, and ideal bond angle(s) for each of the following: (a) CO3 2 (b) SO2 (c) CF4
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the electron-group arrangement, molecular shape, and ideal bond angle(s) for each of the following: (a) SO3 (b) N2O (N is central) (c) CH2Cl2
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Name the shape and give the AXmEn classification and ideal bond angle(s) for each of the following general molecules:
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Name the shape and give the AXmEn classification and ideal bond angle(s) for each of the following general molecules:
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the shape, ideal bond angle(s), and the direction of any deviation from these angles for each of the following: (a) ClO2 (b) PF5 (c) SeF4 (d) KrF2
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the shape, ideal bond angle(s), and the direction of any deviation from these angles for each of the following: (a) ClO3 (b) IF4 (c) SeOF2 (d) TeF5 1
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the shape around each central atom in each molecule, and explain any deviation from ideal bond angles: (a) CH3OH (b) N2O4 (O2NNO2)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the shape around each central atom in each molecule, and explain any deviation from ideal bond angles: (a) H3PO4 (no H-P bond) (b) CH3-O-CH2CH3
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the shape around each central atom in each molecule, and explain any deviation from ideal bond angles: (a) CH3COOH (b) H2O2
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Determine the shape around each central atom in each molecule, and explain any deviation from ideal bond angles: (a) H2SO3 (no H-S bond) (b) N2O3 (ONNO2)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Arrange the following AFn species in order of increasing F-A-F bond angles: BF3, BeF2, CF4, NF3, OF2. 10.47 Arrange the following ACln species in order of decreasing Cl-A-Cl bond angles: SCl2, OCl2, PCl3, SiCl4, SiCl6
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Arrange the following ACln species in order of decreasing Cl-A-Cl bond angles: SCl2, OCl2, PCl3, SiCl4, SiCl6 2
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
State an ideal value for each of the bond angles in each molecule, and note where you expect deviations: (a) (b) (c)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
State an ideal value for each of the bond angles in each molecule, and note where you expect deviations: (a) (b) (c)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Because both tin and carbon are members of Group 4A(14), they form structurally similar compounds. However, tin exhibits a greater variety of structures because it forms several ionic species. Predict the shapes and ideal bond angles, including any deviations, for the following: (a) Sn(CH3)2 (b) SnCl3 (c) Sn(CH3)4 (d) SnF5 (e) SnF6 2 1
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
In the gas phase, phosphorus pentachloride exists as separate molecules. In the solid phase, however, the compound is composed of alternating PCl4 ? and PCl6 ions. What change(s) in molecular shape occur(s) as PCl5 solidifies? How does the Cl-P-Cl angle change?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
For molecules of general formula AXn (where n ? 2), how do you determine if a molecule is polar?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
How can a molecule with polar covalent bonds not be polar? Give an example.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Explain in general why the shape of a biomolecule is important to its function.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Consider the molecules SCl2, F2, CS2, CF4, and BrCl. (a) Which has bonds that are the most polar? (b) Which have a molecular dipole moment?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Consider the molecules BF3, PF3, BrF3, SF4, and SF6. (a) Which has bonds that are the most polar? (b) Which have a molecular dipole moment?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Which molecule in each pair has the greater dipole moment? Give the reason for your choice. (a) SO2 or SO3 (b) ICl or IF (c) SiF4 or SF4 (d) H2O or H2S
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Which molecule in each pair has the greater dipole moment? Give the reason for your choice. (a) ClO2 or SO2 (b) HBr or HCl (c) BeCl2 or SCl2 (d) AsF3 or AsF5
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
There are three different dichloroethylenes (molecular formula C2H2Cl2), which we can designate X, Y, and Z. Compound X has no dipole moment, but compound Z does. Compounds X and Z each combine with hydrogen to give the same product: C2H2Cl2 (X or Z) ? H2 ClCH2CH2Cl What are the structures of X, Y, and Z? Would you expect compound Y to have a dipole moment?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Dinitrogen difluoride, N2F2, is the only stable, simple inorganic molecule with an NNN bond. The compound occurs in cis and trans forms. (a) Draw the molecular shapes of the two forms of N2F2. (b) Predict the polarity, if any, of each form.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
In addition to ammonia, nitrogen forms three other hydrides: hydrazine (N2H4), diazene (N2H2), and tetrazene (N4H4). (a) Use Lewis structures to compare the strength, length, and order of nitrogen- nitrogen bonds in hydrazine, diazene, and N2. (b) Tetrazene (atom sequence H2NNNNH2) decomposes above 0?C to hydrazine and nitrogen gas. Draw a Lewis structure for tetrazene, and calculate H?rxn for this decomposition
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Draw a Lewis structure for each species: (a) PF5; (b) CCl4; (c) H3O?; (d) ICl3; (e) BeH2; (f) PH2 ; (g) GeBr4; (h) CH3 ; (i) BCl3; (j) BrF4 ?; (k) XeO3; (l) TeF4.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Give the molecular shape of each species in Problem 10.62.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Consider the following reaction of silicon tetrafluoride: SiF4 ? F SiF 5 (a) Which depiction below best illustrates the change in molecular shape around Si? (b) Give the name and AXmEn designation of each shape in the depiction chosen in part (a).
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Both aluminum and iodine form chlorides, Al2Cl6 and I2Cl6, with bridging Cl atoms. The Lewis structures are (a) What is the formal charge on each atom? (b) Which of these molecules has a planar shape? Explain
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
The VSEPR model was developed before any xenon compounds had been prepared. Thus, these compounds provided an excellent test of the models predictive power. What would you have predicted for the shapes of XeF2, XeF4, and XeF6?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
When SO3 gains two electrons, SO3 2 forms. (a) Which depiction shown below best illustrates the change in molecular shape around S? (b) Does molecular polarity change during this reaction?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
The actual bond angle in NO2 is 134.3, and in NO2 it is 115.4, although the ideal bond angle is 120 in both. Explain. 1
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Inert xenon actually forms several compounds, especially with the highly electronegative elements oxygen and fluorine. The simple fluorides XeF2, XeF4, and XeF6 are all formed by direct reaction of the elements. As you might expect from the size of the xenon atom, the Xe-F bond is not a strong one. Calculate the Xe-F bond energy in XeF6, given that the heat of formation is 402 kJ/mol.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Propylene oxide is used to make many products, including plastics such as polyurethane. One method for synthesizing it involves oxidizing propene with hydrogen peroxide: (a) What is the molecular shape and ideal bond angle around each carbon atom in propylene oxide? (b) Predict any deviation from the ideal for the actual bond angle (assume the three atoms in the ring form an equilateral triangle)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Chloral, Cl3C-CHO, reacts with water to form the sedative and hypnotic agent chloral hydrate, Cl3C- CH(OH)2. Draw Lewis structures for these substances, and describe the change in molecular shape, if any, that occurs around each of the carbon atoms during the reaction
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Dichlorine heptaoxide, Cl2O7, can be viewed as two ClO4 groups sharing an O atom. Draw a Lewis structure for Cl2O7 with the lowest formal charges, and predict any deviation from the ideal for the Cl- O-Cl bond angle
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Like several other bonds, carbon-oxygen bonds have lengths and strengths that depend on the bond order. Draw Lewis structures for the following species, and arrange them in order of increasing carbon-oxygen bond length and then by increasing carbon-oxygen bond strength: (a) CO; (b) CO3 2; (c) H2CO; (d) CH4O; (e) HCO3 (H attached to O).
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
In the 1980s, there was an international agreement to destroy all stockpiles of mustard gas, ClCH2CH2SCH2CH2Cl. When this substance contacts the moisture in eyes, nasal passages, and skin, the -OH groups of water replace the Cl atoms and create high local concentrations of hydrochloric acid, which cause severe blistering and tissue destruction. Write a balanced equation for this reaction, and calculate ?Hrxn.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
The four bonds of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are polar, but the molecule is nonpolar because the bond polarity is canceled by the symmetric tetrahedral shape. When other atoms substitute for some of the Cl atoms, the symmetry is broken and the molecule becomes polar. Use Figure 9.20 (p. 364) to rank the following molecules from the least polar to the most polar: CH2Br2, CF2Cl2, CH2F2, CH2Cl2, CBr4, CF2Br2.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Ethanol (CH3CH2OH) is being used as a gasoline additive or alternative in many parts of the world. (a) Use bond energies to find ?Hrxn for the combustion of gaseous ethanol. (Assume H2O forms as a gas.) (b) In its standard state at 25C, ethanol is a liquid. Its vaporization requires 40.5 kJ/mol. Correct the value from part (a) to find the heat of reaction for the combustion of liquid ethanol. (c) How does the value from part (b) compare with the value you calculate from standard heats of formation (Appendix B)? (d) Greener methods produce ethanol from corn and other plant material, but the main industrial method involves hydrating ethylene from petroleum. Use Lewis structures and bond energies to calculate ?Hrxn for the formation of gaseous ethanol from ethylene gas with water vapor. 1
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
In the following compounds, the C atoms form a single ring. Draw a Lewis structure for each compound, identify cases for which resonance exists, and determine the carbon-carbon bond order(s): (a) C3H4; (b) C3H6; (c) C4H6; (d) C4H4; (e) C6H
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
An oxide of nitrogen is 25.9% N by mass, has a molar mass of 108 g/mol, and contains no nitrogen- nitrogen or oxygenoxygen bonds. Draw its Lewis structure, and name it
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
An experiment requires 50.0 mL of 0.040 M NaOH for the titration of 1.00 mmol of acid. Mass analysis of the acid shows 2.24% hydrogen, 26.7% carbon, and 71.1% oxygen. Draw the Lewis structure of the acid
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
A gaseous compound has a composition by mass of 24.8% carbon, 2.08% hydrogen, and 73.1% chlorine. At STP, the gas has a density of 4.3 g/L. Draw a Lewis structure that satisfies these facts. Would another structure also satisfy them? Explain.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Perchlorates are powerful oxidizing agents used in fireworks, flares, and the booster rockets of space shuttles. Lewis structures for the perchlorate ion (ClO4 ) can be drawn with all single bonds or with one, two, or three double bonds. Draw each of these possible resonance forms, use formal charges to determine the most important, and calculate its average bond order.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Methane burns in oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water vapor. Hydrogen sulfide burns in oxygen to form sulfur dioxide and water vapor. Use bond energies (Table 9.2, p. 353) to determine the heat of each reaction per mole of O2 (assume Lewis structures with zero formal charges; BE of SNO is 552 kJ/mol)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Use Lewis structures to determine which two of the following are unstable: (a) SF2; (b) SF3; (c) SF4; (d) SF5; (e) SF6.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
A major short-lived, neutral species in flames is OH. (a) What is unusual about the electronic structure of OH? (b) Use the standard heat of formation of OH(g) (39.0 kJ/mol) and bond energies to calculate the O-H bond energy in OH(g). (c) From the average value for the O-H bond energy in Table 9.2 (p. 353) and your value for the O-H bond energy in OH(g), find the energy needed to break the first O-H bond in water.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Pure HN3 (atom sequence HNNN) is explosive. In aqueous solution, it is a weak acid that yields the azide ion, N3 . Draw resonance structures to explain why the nitrogen-nitrogen bond lengths are equal in N3 but unequal in HN3.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Except for nitrogen, the elements of Group 5A(15) all form pentafluorides, and most form pentachlorides. The chlorine atoms of PCl5 can be replaced with fluorine atoms one at a time to give, successively, PCl4F, PCl3F2, , PF5. (a) Given the sizes of F and Cl, would you expect the first two F substitutions to be at axial or equatorial positions? Explain. (b) Which of the five fluorine-containing molecules have no dipole moment?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Dinitrogen monoxide (N2O) supports combustion in a manner similar to oxygen, with the nitrogen atoms forming N2. Draw three resonance structures for N2O (one N is central), and use formal charges to decide the relative importance of each. What correlation can you suggest between the most important structure and the observation that N2O supports combustion?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Oxalic acid (H2C2O4) is found in toxic concentrations in rhubarb leaves. The acid forms two ions, HC2O4 and C2O4 2, by the sequential loss of H? ions. Draw Lewis structures for the three species, and comment on the relative lengths and strengths of their carbon-oxygen bonds. The connections among the atoms are shown below with single bonds only.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
The Murchison meteorite that landed in Australia in 1969 contained 92 different amino acids, including 21 found in Earth organisms. A skeleton structure (single bonds only) of one of these extraterrestrial amino acids is shown below. Draw a Lewis structure, and identify any atoms with a nonzero formal charge.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Hydrazine (N2H4) is used as a rocket fuel because it reacts very exothermically with oxygen to form nitrogen gas and water vapor. The heat released and the increase in number of moles of gas provide thrust. Calculate the heat of reaction.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
A student isolates a product with the molecular shape shown at right (F is orange). (a) If the species is a neutral compound, can the black sphere represent selenium (Se)? (b) If the species is an anion, can the black sphere represent N? (c) If the black sphere represents Br, what is the charge of the species?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
When gaseous sulfur trioxide is dissolved in concentrated sulfuric acid, disulfuric acid forms: SO3(g) ? H2SO4(l) H2S2O7 (l) Use bond energies (Table 9.2, p. 353) to determine H?rxn. (The S atoms in H2S2O7 are bonded through an O atom. Assume Lewis structures with zero formal charges; BE of SNO is 552 kJ/mol.)
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
A molecule of formula AY3 is found experimentally to be polar. Which molecular shapes are possible and which impossible for AY3?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Consider the following molecular shapes: (a) Match each shape with one of the following species: XeF3 ?, SbBr3, GaCl3. (b) Which, if any, is polar? (c) Which has the most valence electrons around the cental atom?
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Hydrogen cyanide can be catalytically reduced with hydrogen to form methylamine. Use Lewis structures and bond energies to determine H?rxn for
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Ethylene, C2H4, and tetrafluoroethylene, C2F4, are used to make the polymers polyethylene and polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon), respectively. (a) Draw the Lewis structures for C2H4 and C2F4, and give the ideal H-C-H and F-C-F bond angles. (b) The actual H-C-H and F-C-F bond angles are 117.4? and 112.4,? respectively. Explain these deviations.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Lewis structures of mescaline, a hallucinogenic compound in peyote cactus, and dopamine, a neurotransmitter in the mammalian brain, appear below. Suggest a reason for mescalines ability to disrupt nerve impulses.
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Using bond lengths in Table 9.3 (p. 353) and assuming ideal geometry, calculate each of the following distances: (a) Between H atoms in C2H2 (b) Between F atoms in SF6 (two answers) (c) Between equatorial F atoms in PF5
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Chapter 10: Problem 10 Chemistry: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change 5
Phosphorus pentachloride, a key industrial compound with annual world production of about 2?107 kg, is used to make other compounds. It reacts with sulfur dioxide to produce phosphorus oxychloride (POCl3) and thionyl chloride (SOCl2). Draw a Lewis structure, and name the molecular shape of each product.
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