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CHEMICAL BONDING

Chemical Bonding

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Chemical Bonding. Chemical Bonds / Formulas. Atoms bond to become “happy” – octet rule When they bond they form compounds. Each compound has a special formula Subscripts show how many of each element is in the compound. FORMULAS. MgCl 2 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chemical Bonding

CHEMICAL BONDING

Page 2: Chemical Bonding

Chemical Bonds / Formulas

Atoms bond to become “happy” – octet rule

When they bond they form compounds.

Each compound has a special formula

Subscripts show how many of each element is in the compound

Page 3: Chemical Bonding

FORMULASMgCl2

The subscript is the number at the bottom of a formula.

There is 1- Mg & 2 – Cl Never use 1 as a subscript!

Page 4: Chemical Bonding

IONIC BONDformed between two ions by the transfer of electrons

Page 5: Chemical Bonding

Formation of Ions from Metals

Ionic compounds result when metals react with nonmetals

Metals lose electrons to form a positive charge Nonmetals gain electrons to form a negative

charge

Metals: Nonmetals: Na+ N -3

Ca+2 S -2

Al+2 Br -

Page 6: Chemical Bonding
Page 7: Chemical Bonding

IONIC BONDS Bonds form from the (+) & (-)

charges. Form a network of ions. Form

strong bonds. Conduct electricity when

melted or dissolved in water.

Page 8: Chemical Bonding
Page 9: Chemical Bonding

Writing Ionic Formulas – binaryCalcium & oxygen

Write the metal ion Ca +2

Write the nonmetal ion O -2

If charges cancel – ratio is 1:1 ( 1 of each)

CaO

Magnesium & chlorine

Write the metal ion Mg +2

Write the nonmetal ion Cl -

If charges DO NOT cancel – drop & swap

MgCl2

Page 10: Chemical Bonding

Transition Metals – d & f block Ion charges change – an element can have

more than one ion charge

The charge is given as a ROMAN NUMERALEx: Iron (II) Fe+2 / Iron (III) Fe+3

Gold (I) Au + / Gold (III) Au+3

You will not have to memorize all the charges each transition metal forms – the charges will be given to you !!!!!

Page 11: Chemical Bonding

Practice Magnesium & iodine

Iron (III) & bromine

Barium & nitrogen

Aluminum & phosphorus

Page 12: Chemical Bonding

Naming Ionic Formula - binary Representative

MetalsName the metalChange the ending of

the nonmetal to – ide

Ex:MgCl2 - magnesium chlorideAlP - aluminum phosphide

Transition MetalsName the metal & Include the

charge using a Roman Numeral

Change the ending of the nonmetal ending to –ide

Ex:

Fe +2 Cl - iron (II) chloride

Au + O -2 gold (I) oxide

Page 13: Chemical Bonding

Practice CaBr2

Na3N

BCl3

MgO

FeCl3

Ni3N

ZnO

FeS

Page 14: Chemical Bonding

Ternary Ionic Bonds – contain Polyatomic Ions

Polyatomic ion : a group of (covalently) bonded nonmetals that form a charge.

Act as a single ion in an ionic bond

Have special names that DO NOT CHANGE

You need to write down the polyatomic ions and their names on an index card and DO NOT LOSE IT!!!

You will use your list on all quizzes and tests!

Page 15: Chemical Bonding

AmmoniumNH4+

Acetate C2H3O2-

Hypochlorite ClO-

Chlorite ClO2-

Chlorate ClO3-

PerchlorateClO4-

Cyanide CN-

Hydroxide OH-

Nitrite NO2-

Nitrate NO3-

Bicarbonate/Hydrogen Carbonate HCO3-

Carbonate CO3-2

Chromate CrO4-2

Dichromate Cr2O7-2

Oxalate C2O4-2

Sulfate SO4-2

Sulfite SO3-2

Phosphite PO3-3

Phosphate PO4-3

Permanganate MnO4-

Peroxide O2-2

Page 16: Chemical Bonding

Writing Ionic Formulas - ternary Write the cation – all metals (only polyatomic cation is

ammonium: NH4+ )

Write the anion – all nonmetals and polyatomic ions

If charges cancel – 1:1 ratio

If charges DO NOT cancel – drop & swap You must use parenthesis if more than one polyatomic

ion is present

Page 17: Chemical Bonding

Naming Ionic Formulas- ternary Cation

Representative metals- element nameTransition (D-block) metals- element name and a

Roman numeral to show chargePolyatomic ion (NH4

+)- regular name Anion

Polyatomic ion- regular nameNonmetal- change ending to -ide

Ex:NaNO3- sodium nitrateCu2(SO4)3- copper (III) sulfateNH4Cl- ammonium chloride

Page 18: Chemical Bonding

Practice cesium nitrate

barium sulfite

aluminum hydroxide

strontium phosphate

ammonium sulfide

Iron(III) chlorite

Zinc(II) nitrite

Gold(III) carbonate

Silver(I) phosphite

Copper(I) acetate

Page 19: Chemical Bonding

COVALENT BONDbond formed by the sharing of electrons

Page 20: Chemical Bonding

Covalent Compounds

Covalent compounds result when nonmetals bond with nonmetals

Both nonmetals share their valence electrons to be happy – Octet Rule

Examples:CO2 SCl2

H2O CH4

Page 21: Chemical Bonding

Naming Covalent formulas Use prefixes to show the # of atoms of each

element in a covalent compound 1 – mono 6 - hexa 2 – di 7 - hepta 3 – tri 8- octa 4 – tetra 9 - nona 5 – penta 10 – deca

1st element – use prefixes only of the # of atoms is greater than 1

2nd element – use prefixes; change ending to – ide

Page 22: Chemical Bonding

Practice CO2

N3F8

Se4Br9

S7O

tetraselenium nonabromide

trinitrogen octafluoride

heptasulfur monoxide

carbon dioxide

Page 23: Chemical Bonding
Page 24: Chemical Bonding

Writing Covalent formulas Use the prefix to identify how many of each

nonmetal atoms are in each molecule The prefix becomes the subscript.

Carbon Tetrahydride Disulfur Hexachloride○ CH4 S2Cl6

Page 25: Chemical Bonding

1) Name the following covalent compounds:a) SiF4

b) N2S3

c) H3Br7

d) S5Br9

e) H2O

2) Write the formulas for the following covalent compounds:

a) diboron hexahydrideb) nitrogen tribromidec) sulfur hexachlorided) diphosphorus pentoxide

Page 26: Chemical Bonding

Drawing Structures- Ionic Electrons are

TRANSFERREDPractice: NaBr

AlCl3

Page 27: Chemical Bonding

Drawing Structures- Covalent Electrons are SHARED

1 pair= single bond2 pairs= double bond3 pairs= triple bond

Dot formulas and Structural formulas

Page 28: Chemical Bonding

Covalent Structure Practice H2O CH4

CO2 Cl2

O2 N2

Page 29: Chemical Bonding

Diatomic Molecules Always pair up with themselves in a

pure sample Allows them to be stable when there are

no other elements to bond with

H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2, Br2, I2

Page 30: Chemical Bonding

Metallic Bonds Formed between two metals

One or two valence electrons (usually transition metals)

strong positive nuclei pull atoms close together, causing the outer e- orbitals to overlap

electrons delocalize; creates a ‘sea of electrons’○ electrons flow freely between atoms, this is why metals

are good conductors of electricity

Page 31: Chemical Bonding

The remaining slides are for

HONORS CHEMISTRY

only

Page 32: Chemical Bonding

VSEPR Valence Shell

Electron Pair RepulsionPredicts shapes of

covalently bonded molecules

Copy the chart on p.263 of your book

Page 33: Chemical Bonding

Coordinate Covalent Bonds one atom contributes both bonding

electrons once formed, no different from other

bonds, just different source of electrons

Page 34: Chemical Bonding

Coordinate Covalent Ex:Chlorate, ClO3

-

Page 35: Chemical Bonding

Resonance Structures shifting of electron pairs/bonds without

shifting atoms

Page 36: Chemical Bonding

Resonance Ex:Carbonate, CO3

-2

Ozone, O3