No, nitrate is NO3-
Any good now?
Thanks. Doh!
Well I can get the numbers to work but I think that's all I'm doing on this example, playing with numbers. Here's how it could work for nitrate - can someone let me know if I am wrong what the correct configuration is?
Promote one of the nitrogen 2s
2 electrons to the empty 3s orbital (* See below)
This results in the following nitrogen orbitals all having one electron: 2s, 2p, 3s
Now hybridize the 2s, 2p, 3s orbitals to make a s
2p
3s
2 (
) orbital - which can contain 5 electron pairs.
I hybridize to make all the N-O bonds identical.
Now the oxygens have full 2s orbital, one full 2p orbital and 2 2s orbitals with one electron in each.
Two oxygens can place their 2 unpaired electrons in 4 of the nitrogen s
2p
3s
2 orbitals (I know, a diagram would really help here).
This gives us NO
2These leaves one nitrogen s
2p
3s
2 orbital containing one unpaired electron.
The third oxygen provides one electron from its 2p and has one "spare" electron. This creates the -1 charge on the nitrate NO
3 - ion . (** see second point below).
Clive
* problem 1. The energy gap between 2s and 3s may be (is?) far too high to promote an electron and then hybridize the 2s 2p and 3s orbitals
** Although the electron "accounting" works I find it a bit discomforting that I have combined two neutral species NO2 and O and created an NO
3 - ion which has a charge.