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Chemical BONDING
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Chemical Bond A bond results from the attraction of nuclei for electrons All atoms trying to achieve a stable octet
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Two Major Types of Bonding
Ionic Bonding one atom has a stronger attraction for electrons than the other. “steals” an electron from a second atom Covalent Bonding In covalent bonding the attraction for electrons is similar for two atoms. They share their electrons to obtain an octet.
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IONic Bonding electrons are transferred between valence shells of atoms ionic compounds are made of ions NOT MOLECULES ionic compounds are called Salts or Crystals
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[METALS ]+ [NON-METALS ]-
IONic bonding Always formed between metals and non-metals [METALS ]+ [NON-METALS ]- Lost e- Gained e-
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Covalent Bonding Pairs of e- are shared between non-metal atoms
molecules Pairs of e- are shared between non-metal atoms
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4 Steps for determining Chemical Bonds
1. Is it a Metal or Non-metal?
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4 Steps for determining Chemical Bonds
Determine if the bond is covalent or ionic. Covalent IONIC Non-metal + Non-metal Metal + Non-metal
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4 Steps for determining Chemical Bonds
Determine the number of valance electrons for each element. Can be found easily by looking at the group number on the periodic table
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4 Steps for determining Chemical Bonds
Draw the Lewis Structure for each element
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4 Steps for determining Chemical Bonds
Now you are ready to create the bond between elements. If the elements are forming a covalent bond they will be sharing electrons and have no charge
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4 Steps for determining Chemical Bonds
IF the elements are IONIC they will be giving or taking an electron from the outershell and will have a positive or negative charge.
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Ions An ion is a charged atom
Positive ion- an atom that loses one or more electrons ion a transfer Negative Ion- an atom that gains an electron from the transfer. NaF MgCl AlCl
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Ionic bonding Ionic bonding involves 3 steps (3 energies)
04/10/99 Ionic bonding involves 3 steps (3 energies) loss of an electron(s) by one element gain of electron(s) by a second element attraction between positive and negative e– 1) 2) Na Cl 3) Cl– Na+ Cl– Na+
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Ionic bonding ( Li + Cl) 04/10/99 Ionic bonding (stealing/transfer of electrons) can be represented in three different ways 3p+ 4n0 2e- 17p+ 18n0 8e-8e-2e 3p+ 4n0 2e-1e- 17p+ 18n0 7e- 8e- 2e- 1e- Li Cl [ Cl ]– [Li]+
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Ionic bonding: Mg + O Mg + O [Mg]2+[O]2– O Mg [ O ]2– [Mg]2+ 1e- 1e-
04/10/99 Mg + O [Mg]2+[O]2– 12p+ 12n0 2e- 8e- 2e- 6e- 2e- 8n0 8p+ 8e- 2e- 8n0 8p+ 1e- 12p+ 12n0 2e- 8e- 1e- O Mg [ O ]2– [Mg]2+
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Ionic bonding: Al + Cl Al + 3Cl [Al]3+[Cl]3– Cl Al Cl [ Cl ]3– [Al]3+
04/10/99 Al + 3Cl [Al]3+[Cl]3– Cl Al Cl [ Cl ]3– [Al]3+ Cl
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Now you try with NaCl
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[Na]+ [ Cl ]- NaCl This is the finished Lewis Dot Structure
How did we get here?
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Always remember atoms are trying to complete their outer shell!
The number of electrons the atoms needs is the total number of bonds they can make. Ex. … H? O? F? N? Cl? C? one two one three one four
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Try another one: Methane CH4
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Methane CH4 This is the finished Lewis dot structure
How did we get here?
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What did the atom of fluorine
say to the atom of sodium? You complete me.
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