Discussion Overview
The discussion revolves around the acidity of H2O compared to H2S, focusing on the roles of formal charge and electronegativity in bonding preferences, particularly regarding hydrogen bonding to sulfur versus nitrogen. The scope includes theoretical considerations and exploratory reasoning related to chemical structures and tautomerization.
Discussion Character
- Exploratory
- Technical explanation
- Debate/contested
- Homework-related
Main Points Raised
- Some participants note that both thiocyanic acid and isothiocyanic acid structures exist, with a significant equilibrium favoring isothiocyanic acid.
- There is a question about why hydrogen is more likely to bond with sulfur than with nitrogen, with one participant suggesting a factor of 20x likelihood.
- Some participants discuss the relevance of formal charges being the same for both nitrogen and sulfur, questioning its impact on bonding.
- Electronegativity is raised as a potential factor, with some arguing that it should not matter due to the equal formal charges in the tautomer forms.
- One participant considers the deprotonated form of thiocyanate and its implications for hydrogen bonding preferences.
- There is a discussion on resonance structures, with participants debating which structure predominates based on electronegativity and formal charge considerations.
Areas of Agreement / Disagreement
Participants express uncertainty and explore multiple competing views regarding the factors influencing hydrogen bonding preferences. There is no consensus on the relative importance of formal charge versus electronegativity in this context.
Contextual Notes
Limitations include unresolved assumptions about the role of electronegativity and formal charge in determining acidity and bonding preferences, as well as the complexity of resonance structures involved.