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Chemical Bonds Chapter 19 Blue Book Chapter 20 White Book
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Oil and Water Observe the demonstration. Why do you think the oil didn’t mix with the water? Why do you think the alcohol did mix with the water?
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Combined Elements Elements combine with other elements to form compounds. A compound has properties that are different from the elements that made it.
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Chemical Formulas Element symbols are combined into chemical formulas to represent compounds The chemical formula shows which elements are involved and the exact number of atoms of each element.
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Chemical Formulas Chemical formulas contain element symbols and subscripts. The subscripts apply to the element that comes before it. If the element does not have a subscript, there is only 1 atom of that type of element.
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Chemical Formula Examples H 2 O CH 4 NH 3 C 2 H 5 O 7
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Chemical Formulas Some formulas have parenthesis. Just like you do in math, if there is a subscript outside a parenthesis, the subscript multiplies everything inside the parenthesis. C 3 (PO 4 ) 4
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Why do atoms bond? Atoms bond to other atoms because the electrons from one atom are attracted to the protons from another atom. All elements can bond except for the Noble Gases. The Nobel Gases cannot bond because they have 8 electrons (the maximum) in their outer energy level.
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Chemically Stable An atom is chemically stable if its outer energy level is full. All elements want to have 8 electrons in its outer energy level (except for Hydrogen which only wants 2). When an atom gets 8 electrons (or 2 for hydrogen) it will be stable.
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Getting Stable Atoms that do not have full outer levels can lose, gain or share electrons to achieve a full outer shell. To do this they combine with another atom Atoms can also combine with multiple atoms to achieve stability
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Chemical Bonds When electrons are shared, lost or gained, the atoms become attracted to each other. This attraction is called a chemical bond. A chemical bond is what holds the two atoms together.
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Gain or Loss of Electrons Atoms lose or gain electrons to become stable. An atom that has lost or gained an electron is called an ion. An ion has a charge because it has unequal numbers of protons and neutrons.
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Ions When an atom loses an electron, it becomes positively charged When an atom gains an electron, it becomes negatively charged The electric force (the force between charged objects) holds the ions together
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How many electrons? To determine how many electrons an element will lose or gain… Look at the periodic table. If all elements want to get to 8 or 0, determine if its closer to zero or eight. If its closer to zero, it will lose and make zero. If its closer to eight, it will gain and make eight.
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Determining Charge An ions charge is also called its oxidation number. For every electron the atom loses, the charge goes up by +1 For every electron the atom gains, the charge goes down by -1
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Ionic Bond When two ions combine, it forms an ionic compound. Occurs between a metal and a nonmetal. Ionic Bonds produce a neutral compound A negative ion combines with a positive ion Sometimes more than two ions must be combined.
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Covalent Bonds When electrons are shared between atoms, it forms a covalent bond. A covalent bond produces a molecule. Electrons are always shared in pairs. If one pair is shared, its called a single bond If two pairs are shared, it’s a double bond If three pairs are shared, it’s a triple bond
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Polar Molecules When the electrons are not equally shared it forms a polar molecule Occurs when one atom is bigger than the other. A polar molecule has a slightly positive end and a slightly negative end When the electrons are shared equally, its called a non-polar molecule.
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Binary Ionic Compounds Binary Compounds are compounds made from two different elements.
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Writing Formulas To write the formula for binary ionic compounds, you must look at the oxidation numbers. The atoms must be combined so that the charge of the compound is neutral. Simplest way is to find the charge of each element involved, and switch the numbers.
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Naming Binary Compounds The positive element is always written first The first element’s name stays the same The ending of the second element is changed to –ide Oxide Hydride Nitride Chloride
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Polyatomic Ions Polyatomic Ions are ions made from more than one element. These ions have a charge and are treated like all other ions when writing chemical formulas. If they have a subscript, put them in parentheses.
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Hydrates An ionic compound that has water chemically attached to it. Example: NaCl ▪ 7H 2 O
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Covalent Molecules Ionic Compounds have one correct combination for two ions. Covalent Molecules have multiple (physically) correct combinations. To distinguish all the molecules made from the same element, prefixes are used.
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Prefixes 1 – mono 2 – di 3 – tri 4 – tetra 5 – penta 6 – hexa 7 – hepta 8 – octa
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Naming Molecules The first element gets a prefix if its subscript is bigger than one. The second element always gets a prefix and its ending gets changed to –ide.
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