IB Chemistry R3.4 R3.4.6
R3.4.6 HL

Lewis Acids and Bases

Key Definitions

  • Lewis acid: An electron-pair acceptor. It has a vacant orbital, an incomplete octet, or a positive/partial positive charge.
  • Lewis base: An electron-pair donor. It has a lone pair of electrons or a π bond available for donation.

Lewis Theory: A Broader Model

The Lewis definition of acids and bases is broader than the Bronsted-Lowry definition. While all Bronsted-Lowry bases are Lewis bases, and all Bronsted-Lowry acids are Lewis acids, the reverse is not always true.

Bronsted-Lowry

Acid: proton (H⁺) donor

Base: proton (H⁺) acceptor

Lewis (broader)

Acid: electron-pair acceptor

Base: electron-pair donor

The Critical Link

Nucleophiles are Lewis bases (they donate electron pairs). Electrophiles are Lewis acids (they accept electron pairs). This connects organic reaction mechanisms directly to Lewis acid-base theory.

Identifying Lewis Acids

A Lewis acid can accept an electron pair because it has:

Lewis Acid Why it accepts electron pairs Type
BF₃B has only 6 electrons (incomplete octet)Neutral (not a Bronsted acid)
AlCl₃Al has only 6 electrons (incomplete octet)Neutral
H⁺No electrons at all, empty 1s orbitalAlso a Bronsted acid
Fe³⁺Empty d orbitals, positive chargeTransition metal cation
Carbocations (R₃C⁺)Positive charge, incomplete octet on COrganic electrophile

Identifying Lewis Bases

Lewis Base Electron pair donated from Type
NH₃Lone pair on NNeutral nucleophile
H₂OLone pair on ONeutral nucleophile
OH⁻Lone pair on OCharged nucleophile
Cl⁻Lone pair on ClCharged nucleophile
Alkene (C=C)π bond electronsOrganic nucleophile

Applying Lewis Theory

Inorganic Example: BF₃ + NH₃

BF₃ (Lewis acid, incomplete octet) reacts with NH₃ (Lewis base, has a lone pair).

BF₃ + :NH₃ → F₃B←NH₃

NH₃ donates its lone pair to B, filling its octet. A coordination bond (coordination bond) forms. The curly arrow goes from the lone pair on N to the empty orbital on B.

Organic Example: Carbocation + Water

(CH₃)₃C⁺ (Lewis acid, carbocation) reacts with H₂O (Lewis base, has lone pairs).

(CH₃)₃C⁺ + :OH₂ → (CH₃)₃C-OH₂⁺

Water donates a lone pair to the carbocation. This is a Lewis acid-base reaction AND a step in the SN1 mechanism (R3.4.9).

Think About It

BF₃ is a Lewis acid but not a Bronsted-Lowry acid. Why?

A Bronsted-Lowry acid must donate a proton (H⁺), but BF₃ contains no hydrogen atoms. It cannot donate H⁺. However, it can accept an electron pair because boron has an incomplete octet (only 6 electrons). This makes it a Lewis acid only.

Common Exam Mistakes

  • Confusing Lewis acids with Bronsted-Lowry acids. A Lewis acid accepts electron pairs, not protons.
  • Forgetting that nucleophiles = Lewis bases and electrophiles = Lewis acids.
  • Drawing the curly arrow the wrong way. It must go from the Lewis base (electron-pair donor) to the Lewis acid (acceptor).
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← R3.4.5 Electrophilic Add.R3.4.7 Coordination Bonds →