##”CCl”_4## has a tetrahedral geometry with bond angles of 109.5 °.
Lewis Structure
Here are the steps that I follow when drawing a Lewis structure.
1. Decide which atom is the central atom in the structure.
That will be the least electronegative atom (##”C”##).
2. Draw a skeleton structure in which the other atoms are single-bonded to the central atom — a ##”C”## atom with four ##”Cl”## atoms attached to it.
3. Draw a trial structure by putting electron pairs around every atom until each gets an octet. (Every atom in the trial structure has an octet.)
4. Count the in your trial structure (32).
5. Count the you actually have available.
##”1 C + 4 Cl” = “1×4 + 4×7” = 32##.
6. The trial structure has exactly the same number of electrons as we have available.
Thus, the trial structure is the correct Lewis structure.
VSEPR Geometry
The Lewis structure shows that there are four electron regions about the central carbon atom.
The model states that the electron regions around an atom spread out to make each region is as far from the others as possible.
For these clouds in ##”CCl”_4## to be as far as possible from one another, they will point toward the corners of a tetrahedron.
The bonds will emanate from the central atom at angles of 109.5 ° to each other.
The structure will be tetrahedral.