The formation of atoms from fundamental particles, interesting as this might be to the physicist, is far from being the ultimate stage in the organization of matter. As we mentioned earlier, when atoms are close enough to one another that the outer electrons of one atom can interact with the other atoms, then attractions can be set up between atoms, strong enough to hold them together in what is termed a chemical bond. In the simplest cases the bond arises from the sharing of two electrons between a pair of atoms, with one electron provided by each of the bonded atoms. Bonds based on electron sharing are known as covalent bonds, and two or more atoms held together as a unit by covalent bonds are known as a molecule. One of the principal triumphs of the theory of quantum mechanics in chemistry (see Chapter 8) has been its ability to predict the kinds of atoms that will bond together, and the three-dimensional structures and reactivities of the molecules that result. (A major section of this book, Chapters 8-14, is devoted to chemical bonding theories.)
Figure 1-2 Shapes and relative sizes of some simple molecules. Two bonded atoms appear to interpenetrate because their electron clouds overlap. By convention. a tapered bond in a drawing represents a bond pointing out toward the observer, with the wide end of the taper closest. and a dashed line is used for a bond that points back behind the plane of the page.
In molecular diagrams, a covalent, electron-sharing bond is represented by a straight line connecting the bonded atoms. In the water molecule, one atom of oxygen (0) is bonded to two hydrogen (H) atoms. The diagram for the molecule can be drawn two ways: Chemical Principles, H20 Molecules.png The second version acknowledges the fact that a water molecule is not linear; the two H -0 bonds make an angle of 105° with one another. Molecules of hydrogen gas, hydrogen sulfide, ammonia, methane, and methyl alcohol (methanol) have the following bond structures:
Molecules 2.png These diagrams show only the connections between atoms in the molecules. They do not show the three-dimensional geometries (or shapes) of the molecules. Figure 1-2 shows the shapes and the relative bulk of several molecules. Note that the bond angle in molecules having more than two atoms can vary. The angle in the water molecule is 105°, and the angle in hydrogen sulfide is 92°.
Each of the molecular diagrams shown can be condensed to a molecular formula, which tells how many atoms of each element are in the molecule, but provides little or no information as to how the atoms are connected. The molecular formula for hydrogen is H ; water, H 0; hydrogen sulfide, H S; ammonia, NH ; methane, CH ; methyl alcohol, CH 0H or CH O; and octane, C H . The formula for octane can also be written.