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Elements and Ionic Compounds Unit II: Intro to Formulas LPChem1415
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A. Element OR Compound? Elements: Formulas only contain ONE symbol Which means only ONE capital letter. Names are only ONE word long. Compounds: Formulas contain two or more symbols. Which means more than one capital letter. Names are TWO words long. LPChem1415
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Elements: A Review We already learned that: Most element formulas consist of the element symbol and nothing more. (Al, Cu, Ne, Au, etc.) Seven elements are “diatomic” and always pair up in the elemental state: (H 2, N 2, O 2, F 2, Cl 2, Br 2, I 2 ) Elements go by their own names But sometimes Carbon is sneaky. LPChem1415
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Compounds There are different types of chemical compound. For this unit, we are only learning IONIC compounds: Ionic compounds form by transfer of valence electrons. LPChem1415 Valence electrons are the outermost electrons in an atom. This atom has lots of electrons. But only ONE in its VALENCE.
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LPChem1415 The periodic table The table is organized so similar elements are together. Similar properties are usually due to similar # of valence electrons.
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LPChem1415 Groups of similar elements have special names:
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LPChem1415 # valence electrons increases, left to right: 1 2 345678
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LPChem1415 Sodium has 1 valence electron Chlorine has 7 valence electrons 1 2 345678
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Lewis Dot Structures Show ONLY valence electrons Each electron is shown as a dot. Electrons come in pairs– top, bottom, left, & right of symbol. LPChem1415
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Valence Electrons & Stability 12 345678 Eight valence electrons = a “full octet” Atoms with a full octet are the most stable This is why the noble gases are “noble”
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Valence Electrons & Stability All other elements work to achieve a “full octet” by gaining, losing, or sharing electrons: LPChem1415 Atoms are like onions– the electrons come in layers. The sodium now has zero electrons in the diagram, but there was already a full octet in the next lower layer, so it is stable now.
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Valence Electrons & Stability Gaining or losing electrons gives the atom a charge. Charged particles are called IONS. If one atom loses electrons, another must gain them. Even tiny electrons are matter, and can’t be created or destroyed! LPChem1415
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Valence Electrons & Stability An atom that loses electrons becomes positively charged. This is a cation. LPChem1415 (Subtracting a negative makes a positive!)
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Cations are Positive LPChem1415
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Valence Electrons & Stability An atom that gains electrons becomes negatively charged. This is an anion. LPChem1415 Note: the name changes to the “–ide” form when it becomes negative!
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LPChem1415 Barium is in column 2 and has 2 valence electrons Sulfur is in column 16 and has 6 valence electrons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
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LPChem1415 To get full octets: Barium must lose TWO electrons Sulfur must gain TWO electrons Key Point: Ion charge is based on how many electrons must be gained or lost to get a full octet.
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Valence Electrons & Stability Main Group Ion Charges LPChem1415 1+ 2+3+ 4±4± 3-2-1- 0
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Form because opposite charged ions attract each other. Ionic Compounds LPChem14 Cations and anions arrange themselves in a “crystal lattice.”
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Ionic Crystals A “crystal lattice” Is a 3-D grid of ions– the general structure of ionic compounds LPChem1415 Is hard to melt due to attraction between anions and cations
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Ionic Names: Cations Write the name of the cation first. Stock System: Use Roman numerals to show the cation’s charge if more than one is possible. D-block (transition metals) Poor metals LPChem1415
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C. Ionic Nomenclature How do you know the Roman numeral? Math! (The overall charge must equal zero.) o FeCl 2 LPChem1415 Cl gets a charge of: 1- (because it is in column 17) Fe must have a charge of ____ to make the compound = 0 2+ o This is Iron (II) Chloride
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Fe 2 S 3 There are only two capital letters, so no polyatomic ion to worry about. I look up S on the periodic table o Column 16: o 6 valence electrons, 2- charge LPChem1415 S
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Fe 2 S 3 = iron ( ? ) sulfide LPChem1415 Fe 2 S 3 2- 6- ( ) 3 = 0 6+ ( )2 + 3+ Iron (III) sulfide
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Fe 2 (CO 3 ) 3 = iron ( ? ) carbonate LPChem1415 Fe 2 (CO 3 ) 3 2- 6- ( ) 3 = 06+ ( )2 + 3+ Iron (III) carbonate
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Fe CO 3 = iron ( ? ) carbonate LPChem1415 Fe CO 3 2- ( ) 1 = 02+ ( )1 + 2+ Iron (II) carbonate
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Ni 2 CO 3 = nickel ( ? ) carbonate LPChem1415 Ni 2 CO 3 2- ( ) 1 = 02+ ( )2 + 1+ Nickel (I) carbonate
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Ionic Names: Cations Roman numerals are NOT needed for: Group 1 & 2 o (1+, 2+) Ag, Zn, Al LPChem1415
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Monatomic anion names are the first syllable of the element name, then -ide. (Chloride, oxide, phosphide, nitride, etc) Polyatomic ions have special names. (Chart on the back of your periodic table.) Do NOT change the ending of polyatomic ions. LPChem1415 Ionic Names: Anions
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C. Ionic Nomenclature Consider the following: Does it contain a polyatomic ion? o 2 elements no; ending is “-ide” o 3+ elements yes; ending is -ate -ite Does it contain a Roman numeral? o Check the table: is the metal NOT in Groups 1 or 2 (or Ag, Zn, Al)? NO numerical prefixes! LPChem1415 Overview:
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C. Ionic Nomenclature LPChem1415 NaBr Na 2 CO 3 FeCl 3 sodium bromide sodium carbonate iron(III) chloride
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