What are the Electron Dot Diagrams and Polarities of IO3- and CHCl3?

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The discussion focuses on the electron dot diagrams and polarities of the ions IO3- and CHCl3. For IO3-, participants confirm that it has three polar covalent bonds due to the electronegativity difference between iodine and oxygen, resulting in a net dipole moment because of its trigonal pyramidal shape. The overall polarity is established as polar, with oxygen carrying a partial negative charge and iodine a partial positive charge. In contrast, CHCl3 is also discussed, with similar reasoning applied to its polar covalent bonds and molecular geometry. The conversation emphasizes the importance of molecular shape in determining overall polarity and the correct depiction of charge distributions in diagrams.
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Homework Statement



For the ion IO3 –

a) Draw the electron dot diagram and structural formula using the method as taught in this course.

b) Predict the shape.

c) Predict whether it is polar or non-polar, justify your prediction. Indicate the positive and negative poles.

For the ion CHCl3

a) Draw the electron dot diagram and structural formula using the method as taught in this course.

b) Predict the shape.

c) Predict whether it is polar or non-polar, justify your prediction. Indicate the positive and negative poles.

Homework Equations


none

The Attempt at a Solution


ZIUpkpv.png
 

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And your question is...?
 
dRic2 said:
And your question is...?
Did I do this correctly?
I kind of rewrote my answer, this seems more accurate.
GstDhwh.png
 

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Sorry I deleted the previous post. Btw now I think it is correct.
 
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CHCl3 was wrong in the previous image

ps: since I'm not an expert, I'd like for someone more competent to check answer c) for IO3-. It seems fine to me, but I don't feel enough prepared to confirm.
 
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dRic2 said:
Sorry I deleted the previous post. Btw now I think it is correct.
I appreciate your reply, but I need certainty, I need to learn from my mistakes "I think it is correct" is too vague, it will make me insecure about my knowledge/understanding of this topic. I'm not devaluing your reply, but it's not a confident answer. Hopefully others will chime in and we can confirm, but thank you, your help is very much appreciated.
 
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dRic2 said:
CHCl3 was wrong in the previous image

ps: since I'm not an expert, I'd like for someone more competent to check answer c) for IO3-. It seems fine to me, but I don't feel enough prepared to confirm.
Oh, you beat me to it! I appreciate it.
 
Yeah sorry, I studied these stuff (and I probably will again) but it has passed some time since the last time I used to think about it so I don't feel so comfortable anymore
 
In general, the answers look correct, though the explanation could be a bit more clear.
Since IO3- has an unequal distribution of electrons, we know that it is a polar covalent bond since it is a molecular compound
IO3- has three bonds, so describing IO3- as a polar covalent bond is unclear. The I-O bonds are polar covalent bonds because of the electronegativity difference between the two atoms (which results in an unequal distribution of electrons).

This means the electrons are being shared unequally, thus the bond dipoles don't cancel each other out
This explanation is not correct. The electrons being shared unequally by the two atoms in a bond result in an electric dipole. Because IO3- has three bonds, there are three such dipoles that compose the molecule. It is the geometry of the molecule that determines whether the dipoles would cancel (e.g. if the molecule were trigonal planar rather than trigonal pyrimidal, the dipoles from the three I-O bonds would cancel and the molecule would be non-polar despite being composed of three polar covalent bonds). You can think of the dipole moments from each of the I-O bonds as a vector pointing in the direction of the I-O bond. To determine the overall dipole moment of the molecule, you sum those three vectors to see to whether they cancel each other or combine additively.

Your drawing does a good job of showing why the individual dipole moments of the three I-O bonds do not cancel and result in the molecule retaining a net dipole moment.

Therefore, the iodine end is slightly and the oxygen end is slightly positive

This is correct.
 
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  • #10
Okay I've been studying/writing out assignments for that last 15 hours. I think it's time for bed that's enough fun for today I managed to reply to the other two threads before heading to bed I will adjust my answer for this tomorrow as well. I'll adjust my answer as soon as I wake up and finish writing, good night and thanks again!
 
  • #11
I adjusted my answer according to your comments for part c) for IO3- also is CHCl3 fine?
c) IO creates three polar covalent bonds from each oxygen atom to the center atom Iodine.Oxygen is more electronegative than Iodine leading to an unequal distribution of electrons -1 +1+1+1= +2 therefore the Iodine end is slightly negative and the oxygen end is slightly positive.
 
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  • #12
Physics345 said:
Iodine is more electronegative than oxygen
Is that true?
 
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  • #13
mjc123 said:
Is that true?
Opps that was a typo good catch.
 
  • #14
Ok I'm confused could some one please clarify something for me,
Ygggdrasil said:
Your drawing does a good job of showing why the individual dipole moments of the three I-O bonds do not cancel and result in the molecule retaining a net dipole moment

The drawing stated that the oxygen end was slightly more positive while the Iodine end is slight more negative. But the electronegativity of oxygen is 3.4 while Iodine is 2.6. Which means electrons will be pulled towards oxygen since it is more electronegative, thus the arrow would be pointing towards oxygen making the oxygen end negative and the iodine end positive.

Am i correct or do I have it all wrong?
 
  • #15
Zara9143 said:
The drawing stated that the oxygen end was slightly more positive while the Iodine end is slight more negative. But the electronegativity of oxygen is 3.4 while Iodine is 2.6. Which means electrons will be pulled towards oxygen since it is more electronegative, thus the arrow would be pointing towards oxygen making the oxygen end negative and the iodine end positive.

Yes, you are correct. Oxygen is more electronegative than iodine, so the oxygen carry a partial negative charge and the iodine would carry a partial positive charge. In some of the OP's diagrams, this is depicted correctly, and in other this is not.
 
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  • #16
Ygggdrasil said:
Yes, you are correct. Oxygen is more electronegative than iodine, so the oxygen carry a partial negative charge and the iodine would carry a partial positive charge. In some of the OP's diagrams, this is depicted correctly, and in other this is not.

Thank You so much! So basically, This molecule is polar because first of all the I-O bonds have a difference of 0.8 which makes them polar covalent. Then secondly the overall polarity of the molecule is polar as well because as we can see the shape of the molecule is not symmetrical due to the lone pair on the central atom which means the dipoles don’t cancel each other out. Therefore the overall polarity of the molecule is polar.

If for example there was another I-O bond instead of the lone pair on top of Iodide then the overall molecular polarity would be non-polar then.

Here's a pic for reference:
20181109_202744.jpg
 

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  • #17
That is a good answer. One suggestion to make the answer more complete would be to describe the geometry of the IO3 ion (there is a particular name for the shape of the ion).
 
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