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Chapter 6A: Chemical Bonding

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1 Chapter 6A: Chemical Bonding
Cartoon courtesy of NearingZero.net

2 Essential Question How do electrons behave during covalent bonding?
Standard 2a Atoms combine to form molecules by sharing electrons to form covalent or metallic bonds.

3 6-1 Chemical Bonds Forces that hold atoms together.
make groups of atoms function as a unit. Ionic bonds – transfer of electrons. Metal + Nonmetal Ex: NaCl, Li2O Covalent bonds – sharing of electrons. Nonmetal + nonmetal Ex: H2O, CO2 Metallic bonds- electrons are free to move throughout material. Ex: Metals

4 Covalent Bonds Nonpolar-Covalent bonds (H2)
Electrons are equally shared. Electronegativity (EN) values are used. H: EN value = 2.1; H-H; 2.1 – 2.1 = 0 EN difference (0 to 0.3). Polar-Covalent bonds (HCl) Electrons are unequally shared. H: EN value = 2.1; Cl: EN value = 3.0 3.0 – 2.1 = 0.9 EN difference (0.3 to 1.7)

5 Using Electronegativity differences
NaCl /0.9 – 3.0/= 2.1 Cl = (look on Periodic Table) Na = or up = Ionic Bond

6 6-2 Covalent Bonding Molecule- smallest unit of matter that can exist & retain all properties of substance. Examples: H2O & O2, C12H22O11 Diatomic molecule- molecule containing 2 identical atoms. (H2 N2 O2 F2 Cl2 Br2 I2)

7 Comparing Monatomic, Diatomic, and Polyatomic Molecules

8 Characteristics of the Covalent Bond
When two atoms form a covalent bond, their shared electrons form overlapping orbitals. Bonding of two H atoms allows each atom to have stable e - configuration of helium, 1s2.

9 Chemical Formula- represents relative # of atoms in a chemical compound by using symbols & subscripts. Example: H2O H=2 atoms O=1 atom Molecular compound (Covalent) - simplest formula unit are molecules. Have low melting & boiling pts. Molecular formula- shows types & #’s of atoms combined in a single molecule.

10 Bond Length- average distance between 2 bonded atoms.
Bond Energy- energy required to break a bond. Gives info about strength of bond. Energy is stored in chemical bonds.

11 The Octet Rule Compounds form so that each atom has an octet (8) e-’s outer shell. By gaining, losing, or sharing e-’s. 8 is Great! H He

12 Electron-Dot Diagrams
Keeps track of valence (outermost) e-’s. Valence e-’s of an atom shown by dots placed around the element’s symbol. Inner-shell e-’s are not shown.

13 Lewis Dot CH4 Shows how valence e-’s are arranged among atoms in a molecule. Stability of compound relates to noble gas e- configuration. H2O

14 Structural Formula Shows shared pair of e-’s by a dashed line.

15 Single bond- 1 pair of e-’s
Double bond- 2 pair of e-’s Triple bond- 3 pair of e-’s Try a couple: O O = O N2 N N

16 Molecular/Covalent Compounds
Write Lewis Structures for Molecular Compounds. Electrons are shared: H2 . . H + H H:H : : : : . : :Cl:Cl: Cl2 Cl. + Cl : : : : :

17 Lewis Structures Often bonding pairs of electrons can be represented with a line: HCl H2O : : . : . H Cl: H:Cl: + = H-Cl: : : : : : : : H : . H:O: = O: H-O: . : H H . . . H

18 Lewis Structures NH3 H . . 3H . H-N: + N: . H H . 4H . CH4 + . . C

19 Chapter 6A SUTW Prompt Describe the different properties of polar covalent bonds from nonpolar covalent bonds by describing how the electrons interact with each other. Complete an 8-10 sentence paragraph using the SUTW paragraph format. Highlight using green, yellow, and pink. Due Date: Tomorrow (start of class).

20 Electron Configuration
Ga 31 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p1

21 Electron Configuration
Kr 36 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p6

22 Electron Configuration
Ag 47 1s22s22p63s23p64s23d104p65s24d9


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