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A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there...

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Page 1: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.
Page 2: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

A. Ionic Bonding1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions2. results when there is large electronegativity differences3. generally involves a metal and a nonmetal

Page 3: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

B. Covalent Bonding1. sharing of electron pairs between two atoms2. results when small electronegativity difference3. generally involves two nonmetal atoms4. nonpolar covalent bond

a. Electrons are shared equallyb. Same two nonmetals or very small

electronegativity difference5. polar covalent bond

a. The more electronegative atom attracts the shared electrons more strongly

b. Results in partial charges on the atoms

Page 4: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

C. Greater electronegativity difference (see p.151) results in a more polar bond or greater ionic character

Page 5: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

A. Molecule – a neutral group of nonmetal atoms joined together by covalent bonds

B. Molecular Compound1. generally contains only nonmetals2. has covalent bonds3. particles are called molecules4. represented by a molecular formula which gives the actual number of atoms or each element

Page 6: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

C. The formation of a covalent bond results from the attraction of the shared electrons by nuclei of both atoms

D. Characteristics of a covalent bond1. bond length – the distance between the nuclei of the two atoms2. bond energy – the energy needed to break a bond

Page 7: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

E. Octet Rule1. atoms lose, gain, or share electrons to have 8 in the outer level; (except H=2)2. most compounds follow the octet rule3. exceptions to the octet rule

a. Odd number of valence electrons for the compound

b. BF3 (also some other halides of B or Be)

c. Halogen atoms attached to P or S; more than 8 electrons around the central atom

Page 8: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

F. Electron Dot Symbola. Use dots to represent the valence electronsb.

K Mg Al Si

N S Br Ar

Page 9: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

G. Lewis Structure (electron dot structures) can be used to show how atoms share electrons in a compound

H. Single, Double, and Triple Covalent Bonds

a. single bond – sharing one pair of electrons

b. double bond – sharing 2 pairs of electrons

c. Triple bond – sharing 3 pairs of electrons

Page 10: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

I. Rules for Lewis Structures1. count the total number of valence electrons (write them down)2. determine the central atom (usually the element closest to the center of periodic table)3. draw skeleton structure using only single bonds4. distribute the remaining electrons to have 8 around each atom (except H=2)5. carbon always has 4 bonds (except when bonded to only 1 atom)6. only one bond to F, Cl, Br, I

Page 11: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

J. Draw Lewis Structure

water methane

ammonia carbon dioxide

Page 12: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

K. Resonance Structures – when more than one Lewis structure can be written for the molecule

1. ozone (O3)

2. sulfur trioxide (SO3)

Page 13: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

A. Ionic Compoundsa. Generally contain a metal and a nonmetalb. (+) and (-) ions combined so that charges are equalc. Most form crystalline solidsd. Represented by a formula unit; simplest ratio of the ions

Page 14: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

B. Electrons Dot Symbols and Ionic Bonding1. sodium and fluorine

2. magnesium and chlorine

Page 15: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

C. Ionic CompoundsMetal and nonmetal

Ionic bonds

High melting points

All are solids

Hard, but brittle

Nonconductors as solids

Conduct when melted or dissolved

Molecular Compounds

Contain only nonmetals

Covalent bonds

Low melting and boiling points

Solids, liquids, and gases

Nonconductors

Page 16: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

D. Polyatomic Ion – a group of covalently bonded atoms with a (+) or (-) charge

Draw Lewis Structuresammonium ion sulfate ion

Page 17: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

A. Outer electrons of a metal move freely from atom to atom

B. Metallic bonding is the result of the attraction between metal atoms and the surrounding “sea of electrons”

C. Metallic Properties1. good conductors of electricity and heat2. shiny appearance3. malleable – can be hammered into different shapes4. ductile – can be drawn into a wire

D. Higher heat of vaporization results from stronger metallic bonding

Page 18: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

A. VSEPR Theory (Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion)1. electron pairs repel and are as far apart as possible2. determines the shape of the molecule (molecular geometry)

Page 19: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

B. Atoms Attached Unshared Pairs Bond Shape

to Central Atom On Central Atom Angles

4 0 109.5 tetrahedral

3 1 109.5 pyramid

3 0 120 triangle

2 2 109.5 bent

2 1 120 bent

2 0 180 linear

Page 20: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

C. Draw Lewis Structure and determine bond angle and shape

methane ammonia

sulfur trioxide water

sulfur dioxide carbon dioxide

Page 21: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

D. Hybridization1. s and p atomic orbitals mix to form hybrid orbitals2.

Type of Hybrid Orbital Found if atom has

sp3 only single bonds

sp2 one double bond

sp one triple bond (or two double)

Page 22: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

D. Hybridization3. Show type of hybridization for

each carbon atom

Page 23: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

E. Polar Molecule (dipole)1. lines up a certain way in an electric field2. molecule with one end slightly positive and the other end slightly negative3.

hydrochloric acid carbon dioxide

water carbon tetrachloride

chloroform

Page 24: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

F. Intermolecular Forces (attraction between molecules)1. Stronger attraction between molecules results in higher melting/boiling point; determines whether the substance is solid, liquid or gas2. Types of Intermolecular Forces

a. London Dispersion Forces (weakest)

b. Dipole Forcesc. Hydrogen Bonding (strongest)

Page 25: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

G. London Dispersion Forces1. Weakest intermolecular force2. Caused by the motion of electrons; having a majority of electron on one side of molecule causes a temporary unbalanced charge3. All molecules have dispersion forces, but they are important only if it does not have dipole forces or hydrogen bonding4. Strength increases with greater molar mass

Page 26: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

H. Dipole Forces1. attraction between polar molecules

2. H – Cl --------H – Cl

Page 27: A. Ionic Bonding 1. attraction between large numbers of (+) ions and (-) ions 2. results when there is large electronegativity differences 3. generally.

I. Hydrogen Bonding1. strongest intermolecular force2. hydrogen attached to N, O, F is also attracted to an unshared pair on a nearby molecule3. water has hydrogen bonding


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