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Bonds Chemical Bonds Unit 3 Chemistry I
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Elements and Periodic Table Elements are organized into columns and rows Columns have same number of valence electrons (generally) Rows for s and p are in the same energy level Metals on left, nonmetals on right, metalloids are stair-step in p block. These divide metals and nonmetals
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Element Classification Metals Solids at room temperature Malleable and ductile Good conductors Nonmetals Gases at room temperature (bromine is exception) Brittle and dull Poor conductors Metalloids Physical and chemical properties of metals and nonmetals
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Nuclear Attraction Shielding electrons Electrons in the inner energy levels block the attraction from the nucleus to electrons in the outer energy level Effective nuclear charge Attraction between the nucleus and the electrons in the outer energy level
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Periodic Trends Atomic radius Electronegativity Ionization energy Ionic radius
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Bonding Chemical Bonding Bond is a force holding two atoms together Type of bond is determined by the number of valence electrons
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Ions Ions Charged particles from gaining or losing electrons Done to reach a noble gas configuration (to be stable) Number of electrons gained/lost depends on the number of valence electrons Positive ions (cations) - metals Atom loses one or more electrons Transition metals can form more than one type of cation Negative ions (anions) - nonmetals Atom gains one or more electrons
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Naming Ions Cations keep their name and add the word ion Anions change the suffix to --- -ide and add the word ion(oxide ion, chloride ion)
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Ionic Bonds Result from: Metal cation losing one or more electrons Nonmetal anion gaining one or more electrons Opposite charges attracting one another Naming Cation is listed first (keeps its name) Anion is listed second (has –ide suffix)
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Polyatomic Ions Ions made from more than one atom Charge relates to the entire group of atoms Indicates the number of electrons needed to gain or lose List found on page 224.
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Ionic Bonds and Metals S Block metals have one oxidation number (number of electrons can lose) D and P block metals can have more than one oxidation state Must indicate the number of electrons lost with a Roman numeral in the name
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Transition Metal Examples Copper (II) chloride Silver (I) sulfide Lead (IV) oxide Chromium (III) bromide Vanadium (V) selenide
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Metallic Bonds Metals can exist bonded to other metal atoms Sea of Electrons model proposes electrons travel through the metal atoms Electrons changing atoms are called delocalized Metallic properties are because of delocalized electrons (high MP/BP, good conductor, malleable) Alloys are combinations of different metals
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Covalent Bonds Occur to achieve a noble gas configuration (8 valence electrons) Electrons are shared between two nonmetals More common than ionic bonds (N 2, H 2 O, CO 2 )
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Types of Covalent Bonds Single covalent bonds share one pair of electrons (one electron from each atom) Double covalent bonds share two pairs of electrons Triple covalent bonds share three pairs of electrons
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Bond Strength The longer the covalent bond, the weaker the bond is The shorter the covalent bond, the stronger the bond is Triple bonds are the strongest; single bonds are the weakest
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Covalent Naming Binary covalent molecules First element Keeps its name Uses a prefix except if only one atom Second element Suffix is –ide ALWAYS uses a prefix
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Lewis Structures Method used to predict the shape of molecules Dots represent valence electrons and a dash/line represent a covalent bond Hydrogen is always an end atom Atom with least attraction for shared electrons is often the central atom (Usually furthest left) Start on left of formula and work to right
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VSEPR Model Molecular shape can be determined based the Lewis structure of a molecule Shape will determine many of the physical and chemical characteristics of a molecule VSEPR (Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion) is the model Arrangement is based on minimizing repulsion around a central atom Lone pairs repel more than bonded pairs Different shapes have different angles/properties See page 260
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Electronegativity and Polarity Types of bonds are determined through difference in electronegativity (EN) Difference in EN greater than 1.7 is an ionic bond Difference in EN between 0.3 and 1.7 is a polar covalent bond Electrons tend to be in the orbital of the element with higher electronegativity (partial negative) Difference in EN less than 0.3 is a nonpolar covalent bond Electrons are shared evenly (no partial charges)
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Polarity Bonds vs. Molecules Bonds are based on electronegativity differences Molecules have polarity based on geometry All polar bonds can be nonpolar molecule
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Intermolecular Forces (IMF) Attraction between two molecules Strength of IMF helps determine the phase of matter of a substance London dispersion forces (dispersion forces) Between nonpolar molecules Weakest of IMFs Dipole – dipole forces Between polar molecules 1% as strong as a covalent bond Hydrogen bonding (strongest IMF) Specific dipole-dipole force between H and N, O, or F
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Properties of Ionic Compounds Ionic compounds form a crystal lattice Crystal lattice is a highly ordered three dimensional shape Positive ions are surrounded by negative ions and negative ions are surrounded by positive ions Lattice energy is the energy needed to separate one mole of ions The more negative the lattice energy, the stronger the attraction Values are negative because energy is released when broken (exothermic)
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Properties of Ionic Compounds Due to strong attractions between positive and negative ions High melting points and boiling points Can conduct electricity in a liquid state (or aqueous state) Hard and brittle
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Properties of Covalent Molecules Crystal lattice structure with complete molecules at the points Low melting points and boiling points Can be hard/soft, flexible Nonpolar molecules will not conduct electricity
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