Definition and Importance
Concept Overview
Molecular geometry: spatial arrangement of atoms in a molecule. Determines physical and chemical properties. Influences reactivity, polarity, color, phase of matter.
Role in Chemical Bonding
Shapes arise from electron pair repulsions and atomic orbital interactions. Bond types and angles affect molecular function. Geometry impacts molecular orbitals and energy levels.
Relevance in Various Fields
Crucial in organic synthesis, drug design, materials science. Predicts molecular interactions, biological activity, catalysis efficiency.
"Geometry is the language of molecules, revealing their secrets in three-dimensional form." -- Linus Pauling
VSEPR Theory
Basic Premise
Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion (VSEPR) theory: electron pairs repel, adopt geometry minimizing repulsion. Electron domains include bonding and lone pairs.
Electron Domains
Electron domains: regions of electron density around central atom. Count bonding pairs, lone pairs, multiple bonds as one domain each.
Predictive Power
VSEPR predicts shapes from electron domains. Lone pairs distort idealized angles. Explains deviations from perfect geometries.
Electron Domains = Bonding pairs + Lone pairsGeometry determined by minimizing electrostatic repulsionElectron Domain Geometry
Two Domains: Linear
Geometry: linear. Bond angle: 180°. Example: BeCl2, CO2.
Three Domains: Trigonal Planar
Geometry: trigonal planar. Bond angle: 120°. Example: BF3.
Four Domains: Tetrahedral
Geometry: tetrahedral. Bond angle: 109.5°. Example: CH4.
Five Domains: Trigonal Bipyramidal
Geometry: trigonal bipyramidal. Bond angles: 90°, 120°. Example: PCl5.
Six Domains: Octahedral
Geometry: octahedral. Bond angle: 90°. Example: SF6.
| Electron Domains | Geometry | Bond Angles | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Linear | 180° | CO2 |
| 3 | Trigonal planar | 120° | BF3 |
| 4 | Tetrahedral | 109.5° | CH4 |
| 5 | Trigonal bipyramidal | 90°, 120° | PCl5 |
| 6 | Octahedral | 90° | SF6 |
Molecular Shapes
Difference from Electron Geometry
Molecular shape: position of atoms only. Electron geometry: includes lone pairs. Lone pairs alter shape by repulsion but not atomic positions.
Common Shapes
Examples: bent, trigonal pyramidal, seesaw, T-shaped, square planar. Shapes dictated by lone pair count and bonding atoms.
Shape Determination
Count electron domains, identify lone pairs, predict electron geometry, adjust to get molecular shape.
Example:Electron domains = 4 (3 bonding + 1 lone pair)Electron geometry = TetrahedralMolecular shape = Trigonal pyramidalBond angle < 109.5°Bond Angles and Distortions
Ideal Bond Angles
Determined by electron domain geometry: 180° (linear), 120° (trigonal planar), 109.5° (tetrahedral), 90°/120° (trigonal bipyramidal), 90° (octahedral).
Lone Pair Effects
Lone pairs exert stronger repulsion than bonding pairs. Result: bond angles compressed between bonded atoms, expanded away from lone pairs.
Multiple Bond Effects
Double/triple bonds have greater electron density, increase repulsion, slightly compress adjacent bond angles.
| Molecule | Shape | Ideal Angle | Observed Angle |
|---|---|---|---|
| NH3 | Trigonal pyramidal | 109.5° | 107° |
| H2O | Bent | 109.5° | 104.5° |
| SO2 | Bent | 120° | 119° |
Orbital Hybridization
Concept
Hybridization: mixing of atomic orbitals to form new hybrid orbitals for bonding. Explains observed geometries and bond strengths.
Common Types
sp (linear), sp2 (trigonal planar), sp3 (tetrahedral), sp3d (trigonal bipyramidal), sp3d2 (octahedral).
Correlation with Geometry
Number of hybrid orbitals = number of electron domains. Hybridization predicts shape and number of bonding orbitals.
Hybridization types:2 domains → sp3 domains → sp24 domains → sp35 domains → sp3d6 domains → sp3d2Molecular Polarity
Definition
Polarity: separation of electrical charge in molecule. Depends on bond polarity and molecular geometry.
Bond Dipoles
Bond dipole: vector quantity; magnitude depends on electronegativity difference, direction from less to more electronegative atom.
Net Dipole Moment
Sum of bond dipoles. Symmetrical molecules often nonpolar (e.g., CO2), asymmetrical molecules polar (e.g., H2O).
Molecular Symmetry
Elements of Symmetry
Symmetry elements: planes, axes, centers of inversion. Used to classify molecules into point groups.
Point Groups
Classification system for molecular symmetry. Influences spectroscopic properties, reactivity.
Symmetry and Physical Properties
Symmetry affects dipole moment, optical activity, IR/Raman spectra.
Spectroscopic Implications
IR and Raman Spectroscopy
Molecular vibrations depend on geometry. Symmetry determines active modes in IR/Raman spectra.
NMR Spectroscopy
Geometry affects chemical shifts, coupling constants. Symmetry simplifies spectra.
UV-Vis Spectroscopy
Geometry influences electronic transitions, absorption wavelengths.
Common Exceptions and Limitations
Expanded Octet
Elements in period 3+ can have more than 8 electrons. Geometry accommodates extra lone pairs or bonds.
Transition Metal Complexes
Geometry influenced by ligand field, coordination number. VSEPR less predictive.
Resonance and Delocalization
Resonance averages bond orders, affects geometry. Partial bonds distort simple models.
Applications of Molecular Geometry
Drug Design
Shape critical for receptor binding, specificity, efficacy.
Catalysis
Geometry controls active site accessibility, substrate orientation.
Materials Science
Determines crystal packing, mechanical properties, conductivity.
Experimental Determination
X-ray Crystallography
Direct measurement of atomic positions, bond lengths, angles in crystals.
Electron Diffraction
Used for gas-phase molecules, provides average geometry.
Spectroscopy and Computational Methods
IR, NMR spectra give indirect geometry clues. Quantum chemical calculations predict and confirm structures.
References
- Pauling, L. The Nature of the Chemical Bond. Cornell University Press, 1960, pp. 49-150.
- Gillespie, R.J. & Robinson, E.A. "The VSEPR Model of Molecular Geometry." Chem. Soc. Rev., 1996, 25, 411-417.
- Cotton, F.A. Chemical Applications of Group Theory. Wiley-Interscience, 1990, pp. 45-98.
- Housecroft, C.E. & Sharpe, A.G. Inorganic Chemistry. Pearson, 2018, pp. 75-120.
- Atkins, P. & de Paula, J. Physical Chemistry. Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 345-387.