Bonds & Crystals
Electronegativity & Polarity
VSEPR, Lewis & Drawing
Forces
More Forces
100

3-D array of alternating positive and negative ions in an ionic compound

What is a crystal lattice?

100

Measure of the "pull" an atom has to attract a pair of bonding electrons.

What is electronegativity?

100

Draw the Lewis diagram for NaCl.

Teacher will correct.

100

Describe what a momentary dipole is and the intermolecular force it causes

A moment when electrons are dispersed unequally, causing a temporary dipole in a molecule. Responsible for London Forces

100

Intermolecular forces that exist in all molecules

What are london forces?

200

Two electrons side by side in a Lewis dot diagram represent:

What is a lone pair?

200

Which molecule is polar: NH3, BF3 or NH4?

NH3

200

Draw the VSEPR diagram for PH3 and state the name of the shape.

Teacher will check drawing. Shape is trigonal pyramidal.

200

List the 3 intermolecular forces in order from weakest to strongest.

Dipole dipole, london dispersion, hydrogen bonding

200

Describe how intermolecular forces influence melting and boiling points

More forces present = needs more energy to break bonds = higher melting or boiling point.



300

The difference between a covalent bond and an ionic bond

Covalent bonds share electrons between two nonmetals, ionic bonds transfer electrons between a metal and a nonmetal.

300

Which of the following is a polar molecule and why?

SiF4, XeF4, Cl2O, SF4

Cl2O, electrons are shared unequally and a molecular dipole exists

300

Which of the following is a polar molecule and why?

SiF4, XeF4, BF3, SF4

BF3, electrons are shared unequally and a molecular dipole exists

300

What intermolecular forces are present in PH3

London dispersion and dipole-dipole forces

300

What intermolecular forces are present between CH3OH molecules?

London forces, dipole dipole, and hydrogen bonds

400

3-D arrangement of atoms continuously linked throughout the crystal by strong covalent bonds

What is a covalent network?

400

Why is HCl a polar molecule?

Chlorine has a higher electronegativity than hydrogen. Electrons want to spend more time around chlorine than around hydrogen, there is an unequal sharing of electrons, making HCl a polar molecule.

400

When a clear molecular dipole doesn't exist in a molecule, the molecule is said to be...

What is nonpolar?

400

Intermolecular forces that only exist between polar molecules

What are dipole-dipole forces?

400

2 conditions needed for hydrogen bonds to form

1. Hydrogen atom must be covalently bonded to another very electronegative atom (N, O, or F)

2. There must be at least one lone pair of electrons on the atom bonded to the hydrogen.

500

The difference between nonpolar covalent bonds and polar covalent bonds.

Nonpolar covalent bonds equally share electrons, polar covalent bonds share electrons unequally

500

Describe one electronegativity trend on the periodic table.

- More protons in the nucleus = greater attraction to the nucleus and harder for electrons to get taken = higher electronegativity 

- More energy levels/farther from nucleus = electrons are not attracted to nucleus as much (nucleus is shielded) so electrons are easier to take (lower electronegativity) 

500

What are the VSEPR shapes present in methanol?

Tetrahedral and bent

500

Put the following chemicals in order from lowest to highest melting points: Ethane, Butanol, Propane, Methane, Butane.

Methane, Ethane, Propane, Butane, Butanol

500

One factor which influences the strength of London dispersion forces

What is 

- Amount of electrons in a molecule (more e- means easier LD force will form, and the stronger the force will be)

- Distance (farther away molecules are, the weaker the force)

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