TEST BANK| MSU CEM 141 EXAM 3 REVIEW WITH 350
REAL EXAM QUESTIONS AND CORRECT VERIFIED
ANSWERS/ ALREADY GRADED A+ (MOST RECENT!!)
What law explains electrostatic attraction in bonding? - ANSWER -
Coulomb's Law: F=k⋅q1⋅q2 / r^2
What does Coulomb's Law help explain in chemistry? - ANSWER -
Ionic bond strength, electron-nucleus attraction, and molecular shapes.
What is the role of quantum mechanics in bonding? - ANSWER - It
explains electron behavior, energy levels, orbital shapes, and
hybridization.
What are hybrid orbitals and what do they do? - ANSWER -
Combinations of atomic orbitals that explain molecular shapes (e.g.,
tetrahedral from sp³).
What is bond order and how is it used? - ANSWER - Indicates bond
strength/stability; calculated in MO theory as ½(bonding - antibonding
electrons).
How do delocalized electrons affect conductivity in metals? - ANSWER
- They allow metals to conduct electricity and heat efficiently.
pg. 1
,Why don't individual atoms have macroscopic properties like boiling
point or color? - ANSWER - These properties emerge from interactions
between many atoms; a single atom lacks the collective behavior
needed.
What happens when two atoms approach and form a bond? - ANSWER
- Attractive and repulsive forces interact until potential energy is
minimized, forming a stable bond.
Why is a third body often needed to form a stable bond? - ANSWER - A
third body carries away excess energy, allowing the new bond to
stabilize.
What determines whether a bond is stable? - ANSWER - A bond is
stable if it results in a lower energy state than the separate atoms.
How does temperature affect bond stability? - ANSWER - Higher
temperature = more kinetic energy = weaker stability, especially for
weak interactions.
What are the molecular orbitals in an H₂ molecule? - ANSWER - One
bonding σ1s orbital and one antibonding σ*1s orbital; H₂ has bond order
of 1.
Why is He₂ not a stable molecule? - ANSWER - Bond order = 0 (equal
bonding and antibonding electrons) → no net attraction.
pg. 2
,How do you calculate bond order in a molecular orbital diagram? -
ANSWER - Bond order = ½ (bonding electrons - antibonding electrons)
What does a bond order of zero indicate? - ANSWER - The bond is not
stable; the molecule will not form.
What does unpaired electrons in MO diagrams indicate? - ANSWER -
The molecule is paramagnetic and attracted to magnetic fields.
What is metallic bonding? - ANSWER - Positive metal ions surrounded
by a sea of delocalized electrons.
Why are metals malleable and ductile? - ANSWER - Metal atoms can
slide past each other without breaking bonds.
Why are metals shiny and conductive? - ANSWER - Delocalized
electrons reflect light and move freely to conduct electricity.
What's a key difference between MO theory and Valence Bond theory? -
ANSWER - MO theory uses delocalized orbitals, while VB uses
localized orbital overlap.
What do MO and VB theories have in common? - ANSWER - Both
describe how atomic orbitals combine to form bonds.
pg. 3
, Why do molecules like H₂ have lower melting points than networks like
diamond? - ANSWER - Molecules have weak intermolecular forces;
networks have strong covalent bonds.
What type of bonding does diamond have? - ANSWER - sp³ hybridized
carbon atoms in a strong 3D network of covalent bonds.
What type of bonding does graphite have? - ANSWER - sp² hybridized
layers with delocalized electrons between layers.
Why is diamond hard and non-conductive? - ANSWER - Strong 3D
covalent network; all electrons are localized in σ bonds.
Why is graphite soft and conductive? - ANSWER - Layers can slide, and
delocalized π electrons allow conductivity.
What are molecular orbitals used for in bonding? - ANSWER - To
explain how heterogeneous (between different atoms) bonds form based
on orbital overlap.
Why do we use 2D cartoon drawings for molecules? - ANSWER - They
simplify 3D molecular structures to make them easier to interpret and
predict properties.
pg. 4