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Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature

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Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature . 1. Chapters 7,8. Adventures of Oxygen Clip . 2. 2. GOALS. 1. Compare and contrast types of chemical bonds (i.e. ionic, covalent). . 2. Predict formulas for stable ionic compounds (binary and tertiary) based on balance of charges. . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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1 Adventur es of Oxygen Clip Chapter s 7,8
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Page 1: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

1

Adventures of

Oxygen Clip

Chapters 7,8

Page 2: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

1. Compare and contrast types of chemical bonds (i.e. ionic, covalent). 2. Predict formulas for stable ionic compounds (binary and tertiary) based on balance of charges.

GOALS

2

3. Use IUPAC nomenclature for both chemical names and formulas:

•Ionic compounds (Binary and tertiary) •Covalent compounds (Binary and tertiary)

4. Apply concepts of the mole and Avogadro’s number to conceptualize and calculate empirical/molecular formulas, mass, moles and molecules relationships.

2

5. Identify substances based on chemical and physical properties

Page 3: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Why do Atoms Form Compounds?

•Stability.•What makes an atom stable?

•Full outer energy level.•Eight.

3

Page 4: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

•A Chemical Bond holds atoms together in a compound.

•Two basic types:1-Ionic2-Covalent

4

Page 5: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Ionic Bonding

Transfer of electrons from one atom

to another atom.

Occurs between metals & nonmetals.

Electrically neutral

Called compounds.

Compound composed of cations and anions.

5

Page 6: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

OPPOSITS ATTRACT!

6

Page 7: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Ionic Bondin

g

CLIP

97

Page 8: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Properties of Ionic Compounds• Crystalline solids at room

temperature.• Arranged in repeating three-

dimensional patterns• Have high melting points• Can conduct electricity

when melted or dissolved in water

8

Page 9: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Covalent BondingThe sharing of

electrons between

atoms.Each atom

attempts to fill

their valence shell.

Occurs between nonmetals

and nonmetals.

Called Molecules: Neutral group of atoms joined by a

covalent bond

9

Page 10: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

10

Page 11: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Hydrogen and Fluorine

Hydrogen and Chlorine

11

Page 12: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Single, Double, Triple

12

Page 13: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Single Covalent Bonds (2e-)

Structural Formula: dashes

Unshared pair

13

Page 14: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Double and Triple Covalent Bonds• Double bond- 2 pairs (for a total of 4)

• Triple bond- 3 pair (for a total 6)

14

Page 15: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

15

Clip

Page 16: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Clip

16

• The element that has a greater electronegativity attract the electrons more

• So, the electronegativity difference between two atoms tells you what kinds of bond is likely to form

Unequal Sharing of Electrons

Polar molecules

happen when one

atom has a greater positive charge

Called Polar Molecules

Page 17: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Unequal Sharing of Electrons

δ+Called Polar Moleculesδ_

17

Practice Quiz

Page 19: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

• The shape may affect the polarity of an entire molecule

• Ex CO2 (2 polar bonds cancel each other)

• The presence of a polar bond in a molecule often makes the entire molecules polar. (Water molecule)

• A molecule that has 2 poles is called a dipolar molecules, or dipole.

Page 20: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Properties of Covalent Molecules• Many are

gases or liquids at room temperature

• Composed of two nonmetals.

• Have low melting and boiling points

18

Page 21: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

• Ionic and Covalent Bonding Review Clip

19

Page 22: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Properties of Ionic and Covalent Compounds/Molecules

Page 23: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

1.CO2

2.H2O3.NaCl4.MgCl2

5.NO2

6.Li2S7.NaF

9.BeO 10.HCl11.NaF12.KCl13.H2O2

14.N2

15.Cl2

Covalent or Ionic?20

Page 24: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Metallic Bonds• Valence electrons (1-

3) can be thought of as a sea of electrons. They are “mobile” and can easily drift freely from one part of the metal to another.

• Metallic bonds consist of the attraction of the free-floating valence electrons for positively charges metal ions.

21

Page 25: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Other Atomic Attractions• Intermolecular attractions are weaker

than either ionic or covalent bonds.

• Van der Waals Forces– Weak attraction consisting of dipole

interactions and dispersion forces– Dipole interactions: when polar

molecules are attracted to another.– Dispersion Forces: weakest of all

interactions. Caused by motion of electrons. Occurs between nonpolar molecules. Temporary polarity.

22

Page 26: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Hydrogen bonding• Found in many

biological molecules• Important in the

properties of water.• Attraction between

hydrogen (when bonded to a very electronegative element) and another molecule.

• About 5% the strength of an average covalent bond. 23

Page 27: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Goals revisited

24

Page 28: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Ionic Bonding- Formula Units

A formula unit is the lowest whole-number ratio of the ions in an ionic compound.

A chemical Formula shows the kinds and numbers of atoms in the smallest representative unit of a substance.

How do you figure out the “Chemical Formula?”

25

Page 29: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

• Writing chemical formulas is a shorthand way of indicating what a substance is made of. 

• These formulas also let you know how many atoms of each type are found in a molecule. 

The chemical formula for water is H2O.  Carbon Dioxide is CO2.  Why does oxygen combine in different ratios, in different compounds?  The chemical formula for table salt is NaCl. Calcium Chloride is CaCl2. Why does chlorine combine in different ratios, in different compounds? 

26

Page 30: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

The simplest compounds are ones

with only two elementsThese are called binary

KI, CO, H2O, NaCl

27

Page 31: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

+1

+2

-1

-2-

3+3

+4 -4

0Oxidation numbers

Tell you how many electrons an atom must gain, lose or share to become

stable.28

Page 32: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

We can predict the ratio of atoms in ionic compounds based on

their oxidation numbers

Oxidation numbers

K Cl+1

-1

KClTells you how many electrons an atom must gain, lose or share to become

stable.

1 valence electron

7 valence electronAll

compounds are neutralThat means the

overall charge is ZERO!

29

Page 33: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Subscripts show the number of atoms of that kind in the compound

Na

Br

+1

-1

NaBr

Ca Br

+2

-1

CaBr2

To make it ZERO, you

need 1 Ca & 2 Br.

30

Page 34: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Some elements have more than one oxidation number

Fe O+3

-2

Fe2O3

Fe O+2

-2

FeOWe call these elements- Multivalent

Elements

31

Page 35: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Now You Try writing Binary Ionic formulas

1.K + Br2.Mg + Cl3.Ca + I4.K + O5.K + I6.Sr + Br7.Na + O

8.Ga + Br9.Fe+2 + O10.Fe+3 + O11.Cu+2 + F12.Cr+3 + O13.Mg + O14.Al + P

32

Page 36: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Cations: ammonium, NH4+

Anions: nitrate, NO3-

sulfate, SO42-

hydroxide, OH-

phosphate, PO43-

carbonate, CO32-

chlorate, ClO3-

permanganate, MnO4-

chromate, CrO42-

Polyatomic Ions:

-a tightly bound group of covalently bonded atoms that has a positive or negative charge and behaves AS A UNIT.

33

Page 37: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Polyatomic Ions-Compounds containing polyatomic ions include both ionic and covalent bonding

Writing Formulas Examples:Sodium and NitrateMagnesium and ChlorateAmmonium and Sulfate

34

Page 38: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Try these1.Na + SO4

2.Mg + PO4

3.Ca + CO3

4.Na + OH5.Mg + OH6.NH4 + OH

7.K + PO4

8.NH4 + NO3

9.H + SO4

10.Ca + SO4

11.K + NO3

12. Na + PO4

35

Page 39: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

36

Page 40: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Naming Binary Compounds and Molecules

• Steps:– If it is Binary-1. Decide if it is an ionic or covalent

bond.– Metal- nonmetal…..

» Ionic– Nonmetal- nonmetal….

» Covalent

Example:• NaCl

37

Page 41: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

If ionic …….2. Only 2 elements3. Check to see if

any elements are multivalent.

4. If all single valent, write the name of the positive ion first.

5. Write the root of the negative ion and add –ide.

Examples:1.NaCl2.K2O3.AlCl34.BaF25.KI6.Li2O

38

Page 42: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

If ionic …….5. Check to see if any

elements are multivalent.

6. If multivalent ions, determine the oxidation number of the element.

7. Use Roman numerals in parentheses after the name of the element.

8. Write the root of the negative ion and add –ide.

Examples:

1.FeO2.Fe2O3

3.CuO4.Cu2O5.PbCl4

6.PbI2

39

Page 43: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

If Covalent... (Molecular Formula)2. Use Greek prefix to indicate how many atoms of each element are in the molecule

3. Add -ide to the more electronegative element

Greek Prefixes1- mono-2- di-3- tri-4- tetra-5- penta-6- hexa-7- hepta-8- octa-

Example:• NO• Nitrogen Monoxide

• PCl3• Phosphorous trichloride

40

Page 44: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

If it contains a polyatomic ion...2. Write the name

of the positive ion.

3. Write the name of the polyatomic ion.

Examples:1. NaCO3

2. KNO3

3. NaC2H3O2

Example:• KOH• Potassium Hydroxide

• CaCO3• Calcium Carbonate

41

Page 45: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Name the following:1.KBr2.HCl3.MgO4.CaCl25.H2O6.NO2

7.CuSO4

8.CaSO4

9.NH4OH10.CaCO3

11.Cu(ClO3) 2

12.Cr2O 3

3342

Page 46: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

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Page 47: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Drawing Lewis Structures• Step #1: Add up the number of

valence electrons that should be included in the Lewis Structure. (TVE)

• Step #2: Calculate # of bonds.– Determine TOE: Theoretical Octet

Electrons– TOE- TVE from step1– Divide by 2 ( 2 electrons for each

bond) • Step #3: Draw the “skeleton

structure” with the central atoms and the other atoms, each connected with a single bond.

• Step #4: Any “leftover” electrons so that all elements meet octet rule (or full outer energy).

NH31. 5 + 3(1) = 8 (nitrogen

has five; each hydrogen has one)

2. . N-8, H (2 each x 3=) 6…– so TOE=14– 14-8= 6– 6/2= 3 bonds

3. .

4. .

Page 48: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Double, triple bonds.• Same as last except…• Step #4: If there are no

electrons left, move electrons from a different atom to form another bond…double

• Side note: When more than one Lewis structure can be drawn, the molecule or ion is said to have resonance.

CO32-

Drawing Lewis Structures

Page 50: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

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Page 51: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Molecules Have Shapes.

• VSEPR theory proposes that the geometric arrangement of terminal atoms, or groups of atoms about a central atom in a covalent compound, or charged ion, is determined solely by the repulsions between electron pairs present in the valence shell of the central atom.

• The number of electron pairs around the central atom can be determined by writing the Lewis structure for the molecule. The geometry of the molecule depends on the number of bonding groups (pairs of electrons) and the number of nonbonding electrons on the central atom.

Page 52: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Molecular Shapes• VSEPR Theory:

(Valence electron-pair repulsion theory)

• The repulsion between electron pairs causes molecular shapes to adjust so that the valence-electron pairs stay as far apart as possible

• Lone pairs have more repulsive force than do shared electron pairs, and thus they force the shared pairs to squeeze more closely together.

Linear

Tetrahedral

PyrimidalTrigonal Planar

Practice: Go back to Lewis Structure Practice, and

predict shapes.

Bent

Page 53: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

Shapes and Polarity• Molecules can be polar, and

when they are polar, they are called dipoles.

• Dipoles are molecules that have a slightly positive charge on one end and a slightly negative charge on the other

• Shape can help determine polarity

• Molecules that are symmetrical tend to be nonpolar. Molecules that are asymmetrical tend to be polar

45

Practice: Go back to Lewis Structure

Practice, and predict polarity.

Page 54: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature

H2O- Bent-Polar SO3 -trigonal planar-nonpolar.

BF3- trigonal planar-nonpolar.

SO2 -bent-polar

Molecules in Motion Website

Page 55: Chemical Bonding and  Nomenclature
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Starter 7


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