Chemical Bonds Chapter 20
Sec. 1 - Combined Elements Elements make compounds Properties of compounds are different from elements Ex: Sodium Chloride, NaCl (table salt) –Na: silver, metal, reacts violently w/ H 2 O –Cl: poisonous greenish-yellow gas
Chemical Formulas H 2 O 2 atoms H and 1 atom O
Atomic Stability Why do atoms form compounds? To be stable Why don’t noble gases form compounds? Stable! Full energy levels!! All atoms form compounds to get FULL ENERGY LEVELS stable
Atomic Stability
1 st energy level full with 2 e - Other levels full with 8 e -
Stability is Reached NaCl is made from atoms losing or gaining electrons H 2 O is different elements share electrons Both ways make a… Chemical Bond: force that holds atoms together in a compound
Types of Bonds Section 2
Ionic Bonds Atoms can lose or gain e - to make an ion Ion: a charged particle because it now has either more or fewer e - than p + + charge: if fewer e - than p + - charge: if more e - than p +
Calcium Oxide - CaO Calcium has 2 valence e - Loses 2 e - and becomes an ion Ca +2 Oxygen has 6 valence e - Gains 2 e - and becomes an ion O -2 Calcium gives e - to Oxygen Opposite charges ATTRACT!!
Ionic Bond – Metal and Nonmetal Def: the force of attraction between opposite charges of the ions Ex: MgCl 2 – zero net charge Smallest Particle = formula unit
Covalent Bond – 2 Nonmetals Def: attraction between atoms when they share electrons Smallest particle = molecule H 2 O CO 2 N 2
Covalent Bonds Single Covalent Bond: 2 shared electrons Multiple Bonds: –Double (4 shared e - ) –Triple (6 shared e - )
Naming Compounds Section 3
Naming Ionic Compounds Binary compound: has 2 elements Ionic compounds – name of ions makes name of compound Positive Ions: name of element –Na + = Sodium ion Negative ions end in – ide –Cl - = Chloride ion
Special Ions
Polyatomic Ions
Sec. 3 – Writing Formulas Remember… compounds are NEUTRAL!! 1.Write the (+) ion 2.Write the (-) ion 3.Balance charges: criss-cross method Reduce to smallest whole #s
Write the Formula Lithium Nitride Lead(IV) Phosphide Calcium Fluoride Ammonium Phosphate Magnesium Hydroxide
Naming Ionic Compounds Put the two ion names together! NaCl –Na + = Sodium ion –Cl - = Chloride ion – Sodium Chloride
Practice Naming RbCl Mg 3 N 2 AlF 3 CrCl 3 Ca(OH) 2 Na 2 CO 3 NH 4 Cl
Naming Covalent Compounds No ions involved Same elements can make different compounds: CO, CO 2 Naming: Use prefixes to tell how many atoms of each element Second element ends in -ide Prefix mono is left out with the first element
Prefixes
Practice Naming N 4 O 6 C 2 O 5 PH 3 Sulfur Hexafluoride Dihydrogen Monoxide
Hydrates Def: has water chemically attached to its ions CoCl 2 6H 2 O Cobalt Chloride Hexahydrate CaSO 4 2H 2 O Calcium Sulfate Dihydrate