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Chemical Bonding

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Page 1: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Chemical Bonding

Page 2: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

I. Introduction

A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a

nonmetal 2. Covalent Bonds – occur b/w 2

nonmetals & in polyatomic ions a. Polar Covalent Bonds -

Page 3: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

B. Distinguishing b/w Types of Bonds 1. Electronegativity – ability of an atom to

attract electron’s to itself.

Page 4: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

2. Bond Polarity: You can use the element’s electronegativities to determine the polarity of the bond – Just find the difference b/w the 2 numbers

0 – 0.4 Covalent bond 0.41 – 0.99 Polar Covalent bond > 1.00 Ionic bond

Page 5: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Determine the Polarity!

1. H – O 2. C – N 3. K – F 4. S – O 5. Al - P

Page 6: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

What Polarity Looks Like

Page 7: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

3. Dipole Moments – When a bond is polar… 1 side of the molecule is more positive and the other side is more negative.

Why? Because the electrons are being pulled toward the more electronegative element.

Page 8: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Dipole Moments

Page 9: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Why is Water’s Dipole Moment So Important?

It has a huge affect on its properties! It’s so important, it has a specific name,

it’s called HYDROGEN BONDING.

It is crucial to life on Earth! Polar water molecules can surround &

attract positive & negative ions which allows materials to dissolve in water!

Page 10: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

It’s polarity also means that water molecules are attracted to each other

A LOT of ENERGY is needed to change H2O from a liquid to a gas because the attraction must be overcome to separate 1 H2O molecule from another.

So what?!?! This causes water on Earth, at Earth’s temperatures, to remain a liquid. OTHERWISE, it would all be a gas and the oceans would be empty!!!!

Page 11: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

II. Ionic Bonds

A. A strong bond caused by the transfer of electrons from a cation (metal) to an anion (nonmetal). 1. Why? The driving force behind this bonding is

that all elements want to have a completely filled outermost energy level! [OCTET RULE]

a.) These outermost electrons are called the VALENCE ELECTRONS

b.) Metals LOSE valence electrons to be stable. c.) Nonmetals GAIN valence electrons to be

stable.

Page 12: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Valence Electrons1e- 8e-

  2e- 3e- 4e- 5e- 6e- 7e-  

               

    2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e-            

          1e-         1e-              

                   1e-               

                                   

                                   

2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e- 2e-

                           

                           

Page 13: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2
Page 14: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Let’s try it!

1. Na and O 2. Al and F 3. Ca and S 4. Mg and P

Page 15: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

B. Ionic Bonding And Structures of Ionic Compounds 1. Ionic compounds are

a. very stable, huge amounts of energy necessary to break them apart

b. high melting & boiling points NaCl has a melting point = ~800°C

Page 16: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

2. Structures of Ionic Compounds a. When you write the formula for an ionic

compound, you are writing its empirical formula.

b. In reality, the actual solid contains tremendous amounts & equal numbers of cations and anions packed together so that the attractions b/w them are maximized.

1.) Remember that cations are always smaller than anions. WHY?

Page 17: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2
Page 18: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

III. Covalent Bonding

A. Sharing electrons! 1. All bonding involves valence electrons

ONLY!!!!!! 2. Covalent bonds occur when 2 atoms (usually

nonmetals) share electrons. 3. LEWIS STRUCTURE – a representation of a

molecule that shows how the valence electrons are arranged among the atoms in the molecule.

Thought up by G.N. Lewis while teaching a chemistry class in 1902.

Page 19: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

See attached page for writing Lewis Structures!

Page 20: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

B. Structures – VSEPR Model 1. Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion

Model a. Useful for predicting the geometric shape

of molecules formed from nonmetals! b. The structure around a given atom is

determined by minimizing repulsions between electron pairs.

Page 21: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Metallic Bonding

How atoms are held together in the solid. Metals hold onto their valence electrons

very weakly. Think of them as positive ions floating in

a sea of electrons!

Page 22: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Sea of Electrons!

Electrons are free to move through the solid.

Metals conduct electricity.

+ + + ++ + + +

+ + + +

Page 23: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Metals are malleable!

Hammered into shape (bend). Ductile - drawn into wires.

+ + + ++ + + +

+ + + +

Page 24: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Malleable Electrons allow atoms to slide by.

+ + + +

+ + ++ + + +

Page 25: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Alloys

Solutions made by dissolving metal into other elements- usually metals.

Melt them together and cool them. If the atoms of the metals are about the

same size, they substitute for each other Called a substitutional alloy

Page 26: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Metal A

Metal B

+

Substitutional alloy

Bronze – Copper and Tin

Brass- 60 % Copper 39% Zinc and 1%Tin

18 carat gold- 75% gold, 25%Ag or Cu

Page 27: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Alloys

If they are different sizes the small one will fit into the spaces of the larger one

Called and interstitial alloy

Page 28: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Metal A

+

Metal B

Interstitial Alloy

Steel – 99% iron 1 % C

Cast iron- 96% Iron, 4%C

Page 29: Chemical Bonding. I. Introduction  A. Types of Chemical Bonds – forces that hold two atom together 1. Ionic Bonds – occur b/w a metal & a nonmetal 2

Alloys

Making an alloy is still just a mixture Blend the properties Still held together with metallic bonding Most of the metals we use daily are

alloys. Designed for a purpose