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QUESTION IMAGE

draw the lewis structure created by the curved arrow. write in formal c…

Question

draw the lewis structure created by the curved arrow. write in formal charges wherever they are not equal to zero.
h—n≡c—h (with a curved arrow from n to the triple bond and a + on c)
click and drag to start drawing a structure.

Explanation:

Step1: Analyze the curved arrow

The curved arrow shows the movement of a lone pair from N to form a new bond with C. Initially, we have \( \ce{H - \overset{..}{N} \equiv \overset{+}{C} - H} \). The lone pair on N (two electrons) will move to form a new bond between N and C, changing the triple bond to a double bond and adjusting formal charges.

Step2: Determine new bonds and charges

  • Nitrogen originally has a lone pair (2 electrons) and is bonded to H (1 bond) and C (triple bond, but after the arrow, the bond order changes).
  • Carbon is positively charged. When the lone pair from N (which has 5 valence electrons, initially: 2 lone pair + 3 bonds (triple bond) = 5, formal charge \( 5 - (2 + 3) = 0 \)? Wait, no, initial structure: N has 2 lone electrons (a lone pair? Wait, the dot is two dots, so a lone pair (2 electrons). Bonding: N is bonded to H (1 bond) and C (triple bond, 3 bonds). So valence electrons for N: 5. Formal charge: \( 5 - (2 + 3) = 0 \). C: valence 4, bonded to N (triple bond, 3 bonds) and H (1 bond), so 4 bonds. But it has a + charge, so formal charge \( 4 - 4 = 0 \)? Wait, no, maybe the initial formal charge on C is +1. Wait, the structure is \( \ce{H - \overset{..}{N} \equiv \overset{+}{C} - H} \). So C has 3 bonds (triple bond) and 1 bond to H? Wait, no, the structure is H - N (with a lone pair) triple bonded to C (with a + charge) bonded to H. So N: 2 lone electrons (1 lone pair), 2 bonds? Wait, no, H - N (single bond), N triple bonded to C, C single bonded to H. So N: bonds: 1 (to H) + 3 (to C) = 4 bonds? No, single bond is 1, triple bond is 3, so total 4 bonds. Valence electrons for N: 5. Formal charge: \( 5 - (0 + 4) = +1 \)? Wait, maybe I messed up. Let's redo:

Valence electrons:

  • N: 5. Bonding: 1 (H) + 3 (C, triple bond) = 4 bonds (8 electrons? No, each bond is 2 electrons. So N has 2 lone electrons (a lone pair, 2 electrons) and 4 bonding electrons (2 bonds? Wait, no, single bond is 2 electrons, triple bond is 6 electrons. So N: 2 (lone pair) + 2 (single bond to H) + 6 (triple bond to C) = 10? No, that can't be. Wait, the correct way: Lewis structure: N has a lone pair (2 electrons), single bond to H (2 electrons), triple bond to C (6 electrons). So total electrons around N: 2 + 2 + 6 = 10, but N can have up to 8 (octet). Wait, no, N is in period 2, octet rule. So maybe the initial structure is incorrect, but the curved arrow is from N's lone pair to form a bond with C.

When the lone pair (2 electrons) from N moves to form a new bond with C, the triple bond between N and C becomes a double bond, and N forms a double bond? Wait, no: initial bond between N and C is triple (3 bonds). The lone pair on N (2 electrons) will form a fourth bond? No, the curved arrow is from N to the bond between N and C, meaning the lone pair becomes a bonding pair, increasing the bond order. Wait, the arrow is from N's lone pair to the N - C bond, so it's a nucleophilic attack or resonance?

Wait, the structure is \( \ce{H - \overset{..}{N} \equiv \overset{+}{C} - H} \). The curved arrow is from N's lone pair (the two dots) to the N - C triple bond? Wait, no, the arrow is pointing to the bond between N and C. So the lone pair on N will form a new bond with C, changing the triple bond to a double bond and N will have a positive charge? Wait, no:

After the arrow: N donates its lone pair to form a bond with C. So N now has: single bond to H, double bond to C (since we added a bond from the lone pair), and C has: double bond to N, single bond to H, and what about the charge?

Wait, initial formal charges:

  • N: valence 5. L…

Answer:

The Lewis structure after the curved arrow is \( \boldsymbol{\ce{H - \overset{+}{N} = C - H}} \) with a lone pair on \( \ce{C} \) (formal charge on \( \ce{N} \) is \( +1 \), on \( \ce{C} \) is \( -1 \) if we consider the lone pair, but maybe the correct formal charges are \( \ce{N} \): \( +1 \), \( \ce{C} \): \( 0 \) – I think I made a mistake earlier, but the key is the bond change from triple to double and charge adjustment. The correct structure should have \( \ce{N} \) with a \( + \) charge, double bonded to \( \ce{C} \), \( \ce{C} \) bonded to \( \ce{H} \), and \( \ce{N} \) bonded to \( \ce{H} \).