What Are Lewis Structures?
Lewis structures (also called Lewis dot diagrams or electron dot structures) are two-dimensional representations of molecules and ions that show how valence electrons are distributed among atoms. Developed by chemist Gilbert N. Lewis in 1916, they remain one of the most powerful tools in chemistry for visualizing bonding, predicting reactivity, and understanding molecular geometry.
In a Lewis structure: - Dots (·) represent lone pairs (non-bonding electrons) - Lines (–) represent bonding pairs (shared electrons forming covalent bonds) - Each line equals one shared pair, or 2 electrons
Valence Electrons: The Foundation
Only valence electrons (outer-shell electrons) participate in bonding and appear in Lewis structures. The number of valence electrons for main-group elements equals the element's group number:
| Group | Example | Valence Electrons |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (alkali metals) | Na, K | 1 |
| 2 (alkaline earth) | Mg, Ca | 2 |
| 13 | B, Al | 3 |
| 14 | C, Si | 4 |
| 15 | N, P | 5 |
| 16 | O, S | 6 |
| 17 (halogens) | F, Cl | 7 |
| 18 (noble gases) | Ne, Ar | 8 |
For ions, add one electron per negative charge and remove one per positive charge.
Step-by-Step: Drawing Lewis Structures
Step 1: Count Total Valence Electrons
Sum the valence electrons from all atoms. For CO₂: - C: 4 electrons - O × 2: 6 × 2 = 12 electrons - Total: 16 electrons
Step 2: Identify the Central Atom
The central atom is usually the least electronegative atom (excluding hydrogen, which is always terminal). Carbon is the central atom in CO₂.
Step 3: Connect Atoms with Single Bonds
Draw single bonds between the central atom and each surrounding (terminal) atom. Each single bond uses 2 electrons.
Step 4: Distribute Remaining Electrons as Lone Pairs
Place lone pairs on terminal atoms first (to complete their octets), then on the central atom. Use the remaining electrons.
Step 5: Check the Octet Rule
If any atom lacks a complete octet after distributing electrons, convert lone pairs on adjacent atoms into additional bonding pairs (forming double or triple bonds).
Step 6: Calculate Formal Charges (Optional but Recommended)
Formal charge = (Valence electrons) − (Lone pair electrons) − ½(Bonding electrons)
The best Lewis structure minimizes formal charges and places any negative formal charge on the most electronegative atom.
Example: Water (H₂O)
- Valence electrons: O has 6, each H has 1 → total = 8
- Central atom: O
- Two O–H single bonds use 4 electrons → 4 remaining
- Place 4 remaining electrons as 2 lone pairs on oxygen
- Both H atoms have 2 electrons (duet) ✓; oxygen has 8 electrons ✓
Result: H–O–H with two lone pairs on O. This lone-pair arrangement is critical for understanding water's bent geometry (covered in VSEPR theory).
Example: Carbon Dioxide (CO₂)
- Valence electrons: 16 total
- Central atom: C
- Two C–O single bonds use 4 electrons → 12 remaining
- Distribute 12 electrons as lone pairs: 3 pairs on each O → O has 8 ✓, but C has only 4 (needs 8) ✗
- Convert a lone pair on each O into a bonding pair: O=C=O (two double bonds)
- Now C has 8 ✓, each O has 8 ✓, formal charges = 0 on all atoms ✓
Expanded Octets and Exceptions
Some atoms can accommodate more than 8 electrons — particularly elements in period 3 and beyond (P, S, Cl, Br, I), which have available d orbitals.
Examples: - PCl₅: Phosphorus has 10 electrons (5 bonding pairs) - SF₆: Sulfur has 12 electrons (6 bonding pairs) - XeF₄: Xenon has 12 electrons (4 bonding pairs + 2 lone pairs)
Incomplete Octets
Some atoms commonly have fewer than 8 electrons: - Beryllium (BeH₂): Be has only 4 electrons (electron-deficient) - Boron (BF₃): B has only 6 electrons — it is a Lewis acid for this reason
Lone Pairs and Molecular Behavior
Lone pairs are not merely "leftover" electrons — they profoundly affect molecular behavior:
- Shape: Lone pairs occupy space and push bonding pairs closer together (VSEPR theory)
- Reactivity: Lone pairs make atoms like N, O, and F excellent electron donors (Lewis bases)
- Polarity: Asymmetric lone pair distribution creates molecular dipoles (polar molecules)
- Hydrogen bonding: Lone pairs on O, N, and F are the acceptor sites for hydrogen bonds
Lewis Structures for Polyatomic Ions
Lewis structures also apply to ions. Simply adjust the total electron count:
- Hydroxide (OH⁻): O has 6 + 1 (from charge) = 7 valence electrons; H has 1; total = 8. One O–H bond + 3 lone pairs on O.
- Ammonium (NH₄⁺): N has 5 − 1 (from +1 charge) = 4; 4H × 1 = 4; total = 8. Four N–H single bonds, no lone pairs.
- Nitrate (NO₃⁻): 24 total electrons. One N=O double bond + two N–O single bonds with lone pairs (resonance structures apply).
Limitations of Lewis Structures
Lewis structures are two-dimensional approximations. They do not:
- Show the true 3D geometry of molecules (VSEPR theory is needed for that)
- Accurately represent molecules with resonance (delocalized electrons)
- Account for paramagnetic molecules like O₂ (which has two unpaired electrons that Lewis structures don't predict)
- Describe metallic bonding or delocalized systems in metals
Despite these limitations, Lewis structures are an indispensable first step in chemical analysis — used in every branch of chemistry from organic synthesis to biochemistry.
Practical Applications
- Drug design: Pharmacologists draw Lewis structures to identify reactive sites (lone pairs, π bonds) in drug molecules and their biological targets.
- Organic reaction mechanisms: Curved arrows showing electron pair movement are drawn over Lewis structures to depict bond making and breaking.
- Predicting acidity/basicity: The presence and accessibility of lone pairs determines whether a molecule acts as a Lewis base; electron-deficient centers are Lewis acids.
- Understanding toxicity: CO (carbon monoxide) is toxic because its lone pairs strongly bind to the iron in hemoglobin, blocking oxygen transport.