Search: in
Molecular geometry
Molecular geometry Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Dictionary     Directory  
molecular geometry Email this to a friend      molecular geometry
Sponsored Links

Molecular geometry

Geometry of the water molecule
Geometry of the water molecule

Molecular geometry or molecular structure is the three-dimensional arrangement of the atoms that constitute a molecule. It determines several properties of a substance including its reactivity, polarity, phase of matter, color, magnetism, and biological activity.[1] [2]

Contents


Molecular geometry determination

The mole geometry References for NMR and FRET distances --> [3][4][5] dihedral angles, 0.089; ?E = 1000 cm-1 --> 0.008; ?E = 1500 cm-1 --> 7 10-4. That is, if the excitation energy is 500 cm-1, then about 9% of the molecules are thermally excited at room temperature. The lowest excitation vibrational energy in water is the bending mode (about 1600 cm-1). Thus, at room temperature less than 0.07% of all the molecules of a given amount of water will vibrate faster than at absolute zero.

As stated above, rotation hardly influences the molecular geometry. But, as a quantum mechanical motion, it is thermally excited at relatively (as compared to vibration) low temperatures. From a classical point of view it can be stated that more molecules rotate faster at higher temperatures, i.e., they have larger angular velocity and angular momentum. In quantum mechanically language: more eigenstates of higher angular momentum become thermally populated with rising temperatures. Typical rotational excitation energies are on the order of a few cm-1.

The results of many spectroscopic experiments are broadened because they involve an averaging over rotational states. It is often difficult to extract geometries from spectra at high temperatures, because the number of rotational states probed in the experimental averaging increases with increasing temperature. Thus, many spectroscopic observations can only be expected to yield reliable molecular geometries at temperatures close to absolute zero, because at higher temperatures too many higher rotational states are thermally populated.

Bonding

Molecules, by definition, are most often held together with covalent bonds involving single, double, and/or triple bonds, where a "bond" is a shared pair of electrons (the other method of bonding between atoms is called ionic bonding and involves a positive cation and a negative anion).

Molecular geometries can be specified in terms of bond lengths, bond angles and torsional angles. The bond length is defined to be the average distance between the centers of two atoms bonded together in any given molecule. A bond angle is the angle formed between three atoms across at least two bonds. For four atoms bonded together in a straight chain, the torsional angle is the angle between the plane formed by the first three atoms and the plane formed by the last three atoms.

Molecular geometry is determined by the quantum mechanical behavior of the electrons. Using the valence bond approximation this can be understood by the type of bonds between the atoms that make up the molecule. When atoms interact to form a chemical bond, the atomic orbitals are said to mix in a process called orbital hybridisation. The two most common types of bonds are Sigma bonds and Pi bonds. The geometry can also be understood by molecular orbital theory where the electrons are delocalised.

An understanding of the wavelike behavior of electrons in atoms and molecules is the subject of quantum chemistry.

Isomers

Isomers are types of molecules that share a chemical formula but have different geometries, resulting in very different properties:

  • A pure substance is composed of only one type of isomer of a molecule (all have the same geometrical structure).
  • Structural isomers have the same chemical formula but different physical arrangements, often forming alternate molecular geometries with very different properties. The atoms are not bonded (connected) together in the same orders.
    • Functional isomers are special kinds of structural isomers, where certain groups of atoms exhibit a special kind of behavior, such as an ether or an alcohol.
  • Stereoisomers may have many similar physicochemical properties (melting point, boiling point) and at the same time very different biochemical activities. This is because they exhibit a handedness that is commonly found in living systems. One manifestation of this chirality or handedness is that they have the ability to rotate polarized light in different directions.

Types of molecular structure

There are six basic shape types for molecules

  • Linear: In a linear model, atoms are connected in a straight line. The bond angles are set at 180°. A bond angle is very simply the geometric angle between two adjacent bonds. For example, carbon dioxide has a linear molecular shape.
  • Trigonal planar: Just from its name, it can easily be said that molecules with the trigonal planar shape are somewhat triangular and in one plane (meaning a flat surface). Consequently, the bond angles are set at 120°. An example of this is boron trifluoride.
  • Tetrahedral: Tetra- signifies four, and -hedral relates to a surface, so tetrahedral almost literally means "four surfaces." This is when there are four bonds all on one central atom, with no extra unshared electron pairs. In accordance with the VSEPR (valence-shell electron pair repulsion theory), the bond angles between the electron bonds are 109.5°. An example of a tetrahedral molecule is methane (CH4).
  • Octahedral: Octa- signifies eight, and -hedral relates to a surface, so octahedral almost literally means "eight surfaces." The bond angle is 90 degrees. An example of an octahedral molecule is sulfur hexafluoride (SF6).
  • Pyramidal: Pyramidal-shaped molecules have pyramid-like shapes. Unlike the linear and trigonal planar shapes but similar to the tetrahedral orientation, pyramidal shapes requires three dimensions in order to fully separate the electrons. Here, there are only three pairs of bonded electrons, leaving one unshared lone pair. Lone pair - bond pair repulsions change the angle from the tetrahedral angle to a slightly lower value. An example is NH3 (ammonia).
  • Bent: The final basic shape of a molecule is the non-linear shape, also known as bent or angular. One of the most unquestionably important molecules any chemist studies is water, or H2O. A water molecule has a non-linear shape because it has two pairs of bonded electrons and two unshared lone pairs. Like in the other arrangements, electrons must be spaced as far as possible. Lone pair - bond pair repulsions push the angle from the tetrahedral angle down to around 106°.

VSEPR Table

Outer Atoms Lone Pairs Charge Clouds Shape Ideal Bond Angle Example Image
2
0
2
linear
180°
BeCl2
3
0
3
trigonal planar
120°
BF3
2
1
3
bent
120°
SO2
4
0
4
tetrahedral
109.5°
CH4
3
1
4
trigonal pyramidal
109.5°
NH3
2
2
4
bent
109.5°
H2O
5
0
5
trigonal bipyramidal
90°, 120°
PCl5
4
1
5
seesaw
90°, 120°
SF4
3
2
5
T-shaped
90°
ClF3
2
3
5
linear
180°
XeF2
6
0
6
octahedral
90°
SF6
5
1
6
square pyramidal
90°
BrF5
4
2
6
square planar
90°
XeF4

3-D Specification

3-D Representations

  • Line or stick - atomic nuclei are not represented, just the bonds as sticks or lines
:{| class=wikitable
|-
|

|

|

|

|}

|-
|

|

|

|}
  • Ball and stick - atomic nuclei are represented by spheres (balls) and the bonds as sticks
:{| class=wikitable
|-
|

|

|

|

|}
:{| class=wikitable
|-
|

|

|

|

|}
  • Cartoon - a representation used for proteins where loops, beta sheets, alpha helices are represented diagrammatically and no atoms or bonds are represented explicitly just the protein backbone as a smooth pipe
|-
|

|

|

|

|}

See also

References

ar:????? ?????? de:Molekülstruktur es:Geometría molecular ja:???? pl:VSEPR pt:Geometria molecular sr:?????????? ???????? sv:Molekylär geometri zh:????





Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article



Related Links in molecular geometry

Search for molecular geometry in Tutorials
Search for molecular geometry in Encyclopedia
Search for molecular geometry in Dictionary
Search for molecular geometry in Open Directory
Search for molecular geometry in Store
Search for molecular geometry in PriceGig



Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor

Advertisement

Advertisement



Molecular geometry
molecular geometry top molecular geometry

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2008-2009 TutorGig.com. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement