Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Notes 3- Chemical Bonds, Isotopes, Ions
2
Bonding properties Effect of electrons
chemical behavior of an atom depends on its electron arrangement depends on the number of electrons in its outermost shell, the valence shell Octet rule- atoms “want” to have 8 electrons in the valence shell How does this atom behave?
3
Bonding properties How does this atom behave?
4
Chemical reactivity Atoms tend to:
Complete a partially filled outer (valence) electron shell or Empty a partially filled outer (valence) electron shell 8 is the magic number of valence electrons!! This tendency drives chemical reactions
5
Chemical Bonds Strongest Bonds:
1. Covalent Bonds: two atoms need one electron, so they share a pair of electrons Polar Covalent Bond: electrons are shared unevenly ex) H2O- oxygen has the stronger “attraction” for electrons than hydrogen. Nonpolar Covalent Bond: electrons are shared equally between the atoms. ex) O2
6
Chemical Bonds Double covalent bonds
Two atoms can share more than one pair of electrons double bonds (2 pairs of electrons) triple bonds (3 pairs of electrons) Very strong bonds
7
Chemical Bonds 2. Ionic Bonds: electron is transferred from one atom to another Forms one (+) and one (-) ion (+) = cation (-) = anion Weaker than covalent bond Generally occur between a metal and a nonmetal
8
Isotopes # of neutrons varies, but same # of protons (same element, different mass) Radioactive isotopes used as biological tracers (follow molecules, medical diagnoses) Some are unstable- can also be a biological hazard
9
Ions Atom with a charge Remember... Cation= positive charge
Anion= negative charge
10
Na Ions 11 +1 23 How many protons does sodium have?
How many neutrons does sodium have? How many electrons does sodium have? 11 Na +1 23
11
Ag Ions 47 -2 108 How many protons does silver have?
How many neutrons does silver have? How many electrons does silver have? 47 Ag -2 108
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.