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Chemistry for Pharmacy Students : General, Organic and Natural ...

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24 CH2 ATOMIC STRUCTURE AND BONDING<br />

If the structure is an ion, electrons are added or subtracted to give the proper<br />

charge. Lewis structures are useful as they show what atoms are bonded<br />

together, <strong>and</strong> whether any atoms possess lone pairs of electrons or have a<br />

<strong>for</strong>mal charge. A <strong>for</strong>mal charge is the difference between the number of<br />

valence electrons an atom actually has when it is not bonded to any other<br />

atoms, <strong>and</strong> the number of nonbonding electrons <strong>and</strong> half of its bonding<br />

electrons. Thus, a positive or negative charge assigned to an atom is called a<br />

<strong>for</strong>mal charge. The decision as to where to put the charge is made by<br />

calculating the <strong>for</strong>mal charge <strong>for</strong> each atom in an ion or a molecule. For<br />

example, the hydronium ion (H3O þ ) is positively charged <strong>and</strong> the oxygen<br />

atom has a <strong>for</strong>mal charge of þ1.<br />

+ ..<br />

H O H<br />

H<br />

Assigned 5 valence electrons:<br />

<strong>for</strong>mal charge of +1<br />

So; <strong>for</strong>mal charge ¼ðgroup numberÞ<br />

ðshared electronsÞ<br />

ðnonbonding electronsÞ 1=2<br />

¼ 6<br />

¼ 1:<br />

2 1=2ð6Þ<br />

An uncharged oxygen atom must have six electrons in its valence shell. In<br />

the hydronium ion, oxygen bonds with three hydrogen atoms. So, only five<br />

electrons effectively belong to oxygen, which is one less than the valence<br />

electrons. Thus, oxygen bears a <strong>for</strong>mal charge of þ1. Elements of the<br />

second period, including carbon, nitrogen, oxygen <strong>and</strong> fluorine, cannot<br />

accommodate more than eight electrons as they have only four orbitals (2s,<br />

2px, 2py <strong>and</strong> 2pz) in their valence shells.<br />

2.3.2 Various types of chemical bonding<br />

A chemical bond is the attractive <strong>for</strong>ce that holds two atoms together.<br />

Valence electrons take part in bonding. An atom that gains electrons<br />

becomes an anion, a negatively charged ion, <strong>and</strong> an atom that loses<br />

electrons becomes a cation, a positively charged ion. Metals tend to lose<br />

electrons <strong>and</strong> nonmetals tend to gain electrons. While cations are smaller<br />

than atoms, anions are larger. Atoms decrease in size as they go across a<br />

period, <strong>and</strong> increase in size as they go down a group <strong>and</strong> increase the<br />

number of shells to hold electrons.<br />

The energy required <strong>for</strong> removing an electron from an atom or ion in the<br />

gas phase is called ionization energy. Atoms can have a series of ionization<br />

energies, since more than one electron can always be removed, except <strong>for</strong>

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