Basic chemistry: sulphur dioxide shape?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the molecular shape of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and the confusion surrounding its electron configuration. SO2 has a bent shape due to the presence of one lone pair of electrons on the sulfur atom, leading to an angle of approximately 120 degrees between the oxygen atoms. Sulfur, which has six valence electrons, forms two double bonds with oxygen, but the concept of "partial double bonds" arises from resonance, where the double bond character can shift between the two oxygen atoms. This complexity in bonding and electron sharing contributes to the confusion for those learning basic chemistry concepts. Understanding these principles is essential for grasping the structure and behavior of SO2.
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Basic chemistry: sulphur dioxide shape??!

I realize this isn't homework, but it's so basic I'm ashamed of putting it in the chemistry section. I'm trying to self-teach here, but my textbook is awful and I'm even worse.

Question: Workout the shape of SO2.

Step 1: Draw lewis diagram to work out how lone pairs and bonds are arranged. That's my first problem. I can't figure out how in high heaven the funny dots fits together in a way that works. Resigned, I improvise step 2

Step 2: Go onto wikipedia and discover that SO2 is structured O=S=O. Problem #2. Since when did sulphur get 10 electrons in the valence shell?? Ignoring the lone pair apparently in limbo I finish the question.

Step 3: 2 double bonds → 2 electron clouds → a linear molecule.
Checking the answers, SO2 is bent. Apparently, I should have counted the 5th pair. So ultimately my question is: why does sulphur has 10 electrons in SO2? Very confused here and any help will be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
 
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hyurnat4 said:
So ultimately my question is: why does sulphur has 10 electrons in SO2? Very confused here and any help will be appreciated. Thanks in advance.

Sulphur has 6 valence electrons. The bond formed is O-S-O where the angle OSO is 120 degree.
In this structure, sulphure shares a pair of electrons with oxygen. This bond is partially double bond. The bond length is 143 pm which comes between single and double bond length(due to resonance)
The concept is bit too high.
Simply see it as, sulphur has 1 lone pairs in this bond.
 


rktpro said:
Sulphur has 6 valence electrons. The bond formed is O-S-O where the angle OSO is 120 degree.
In this structure, sulphur shares a pair of electrons with oxygen. This bond is partially double bond.

Still trying to get my head round this... I don't get the 'partially double bond' bit. Isn't sharing a pair of electrons by definition a single bond?
Thanks for the reply.
 


hyurnat4 said:
Still trying to get my head round this... I don't get the 'partially double bond' bit. Isn't sharing a pair of electrons by definition a single bond?
Thanks for the reply.
Partial double means that the double bond can shift between the two oxygen molecules.
Resonance[/PLAIN]
 
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rktpro said:
double bond can shift between the two oxygen molecules

You might want to correct it.
 


Oh...
That seems... unfair. Why does chemistry have to be more complicated than it already is?
Thanks for the help anyway guys, this is probably a bit beyond what I'm supposed to learn but it's good to know how the molecule works. :frown:
 


Sorry, Borek.
IT shifts between one oxygen molecule and sulphur molecule pair to the other oxygen and sulphur molecule pair where sulphur is common to both.
 
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I understand English is not your first language? Please check exact meaning of the words molecule, atom and bond - what you wrote makes no sense. Oxygen molecule is O2. I guess you mean electrons move between oxygen-sulfur bonds inside the SO2 molecule.
 
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