大象传媒

Dot and cross diagram

A dot and cross diagram can model the bonding in a simple :

  • the outer shell of each is drawn as a circle
  • circles overlap where there is a
  • from one atom are drawn as dots, and electrons from another atom as crosses

Example 1 - Hydrogen chloride

  1. Write down the formula HCl. This explains which atoms you need to draw (1 脳 H and 1 脳 Cl).
  2. Sketch a simple displayed formula to work out the order in which the atoms are connected (H-Cl).
  3. Work out how many electrons are in the outer shell of each atom (H has 1 and Cl has 7).
  4. Draw circles to represent the electron shell of each atom overlapping the circles where the atoms are bonded.
  5. Add dots to represent the outer electrons of one type of atom (H).
  6. Add crosses to represent the outer electrons of the other type of atom (Cl).
  7. Make sure the electrons are always in pairs. A bond is a dot and a cross. Other pairs should be two dots or two crosses.
Dot and cross diagram of hydrogen chloride.

Example 2 - Water

  1. The formula is H2O so the dot and cross diagram includes two H atoms and one O atom.
  2. H has 1 outer electron. O has 6 outer electrons.
  3. The H circles must each overlap the O circle.
Dot and cross diagram of water

Question

Draw the dot and cross diagram for ammonia, NH3. Nitrogen has five outer electrons because it is in group 5.

Question

Draw the dot and cross diagram for methane, CH4. Carbon has four outer electrons.

Double and triple bonds

Some contain a , which consists of two shared pairs of electrons. For example, oxygen molecules consist of two oxygen atoms joined together. Oxygen atoms can form two covalent bonds, so to link the two oxygen atoms together, a double bond forms.

Table of oxygen and carbon dioxide dot and cross diagrams

Nitrogen molecules consist of two nitrogen atoms joined together. Nitrogen atoms can form three covalent bonds, so a triple bond forms between them. The structure of nitrogen is N鈮, showing that it has three shared pairs of electrons.