Chemistry, asked by irishpagulayan, 10 months ago

how can you determine the hybrid orbital of a compound?

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Answered by harpindergrewal786
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How do you check the hybridisation of carbons in organic compounds?

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Ravi Divakaran, Ph. D. Chemistry & Science

Answered Jun 10, 2018 · Author has 140 answers and 45.9k answer views

How do you check the hybridisation of carbons in organic compounds?

Here’s a simple answer to this question without any bond counts or sigma or pi to worry about:

First, write down the expanded structure of the compound correctly, with all bonds shown.

Then count the number of atoms connected to the carbon of interest to you.

If the carbon is connected to four other atoms, its hybridisation is sp3 (easy to remember: number of atoms = sum of the superscripts; 1 for s and 3 for p; 1+3 = 4).

If the carbon is connected to three other atoms, its hybridisation is sp2 (easy to remember: number of atoms = sum of the superscripts; 1 for s and 2 for p; 1+2 = 3).

If the carbon is connected to two other atoms, its hybridisation is sp (easy to remember: number of atoms = sum of the superscripts; 1 for s and 1 for p; 1+1 = 2).

Examples: (Unfortunately in the Quora text editor, I cannot draw expanded structures with all bonds shown; so we will use our imagination and just count the atoms attached to the carbon atoms)

Methane → CH4 → four H atoms on the C → hybridisation is sp3.

Ethane → CH3—CH3 → first carbon has four atoms on it (3 H atoms and 1 C atom) → hybridisation of first carbon is sp3. Same argument for the second carbon also; therefore hybridisation of second carbon is also sp3.

Ethene (or ethylene) → CH2=CH2 → first carbon has three atoms on it (2 H atoms and 1 C atom) → hybridisation of first carbon is sp2. Same argument for the second carbon also; therefore hybridisation of second carbon is also sp2.

Ethyne (or acetylene) → CH=CH (its a triple bond between the C atoms! How do I draw a triple bond in Quora ?) → first carbon has two atoms on it (1 H atom and 1 C atom) → hybridisation of first carbon is sp. Same argument for the second carbon also; therefore hybridisation of second carbon is also sp.

Propene → CH3-CH=CH2 → first carbon has fouratoms on it (3 H atoms and 1 C atom on the right) → hybridisation of first carbon is sp3. Second carbon has three atoms on it (1 H atom and 2 C atoms, left and right) → hybridisation of second carbon is sp2. Third carbon has three atoms on it (2 H atoms and 1 C atom on the left) → hybridisation of third carbon is sp2.


irishpagulayan: how about compounds like H3C-CH=CH2 and CH3-CC-CH2OH? do they have various hybrid orbitals?
irishpagulayan: oh, I just read the last part of your answer. Thank you very much!
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