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Published byIsabel McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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Kinds of Bonds
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Chemical Bonds are formed when atoms gain, lose, or share electrons
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ion An ion is a charged particle – it has a different number of electrons than protons ionic bond An ionic bond is the attractive force between the opposite charges of the ions Ionic Bonding
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Types of Ions A cation has a positive charge An anion has a negative charge
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Ionic Bond Formation crystals Ionic substances form crystals because they connect to all of the neighboring opposite charges.
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Properties of Ionic Compounds Hard Hard and brittle Solid Solid at room temperature high boiling Have very high melting points and boiling points
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Properties of Ionic Compounds electricity Can conduct electricity if heated to a liquid state dissolvedwater Can conduct electricity if dissolved in water or some other solvent
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NaCl (salt) NaF (in toothpaste) NaOH (Drano) Examples
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Covalent Bonding covalent share A covalent bond forms when atoms share electrons singleone multiple A single bond contains one pair of electrons, but atoms can share multiple pairs of electrons.
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Covalent Bonding Connect lone single dots of Lewis structure to show covalent bonds
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hard and brittle flexible Some are hard and brittle but less than ionic; Others are flexible, or soft and mushy. solid, liquid or gas Can be solid, liquid or gas at room temperature. boiling points Their boiling points vary from - 253°C to over 4800°C. Covalent Properties
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notelectricity Most do not conduct electricity regardless of their state of matter. don’t When dissolved in a solvent, they don’t conduct electricity. Covalent Properties
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C 12 H 22 O 11 (Sugar) NH 3 (Ammonia) C 3 H 8 (Propane) Examples
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Metallic Bonds metal A metallic bond involves an attraction between metal atoms that loosely involves many electrons. Sea of Electrons We call this a “Sea of Electrons”
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Metallic Bonds heat electricity Many electrons are moving around the metal which makes the metal highly conductive to heat and electricity.
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Oxidation/“Magic” Numbers 0 or 8 Atoms gain / lose electrons to form an ionic bond to get to the magic number of 0 or 8 how many Oxidation is how many electrons you will gain or lose to get to 0 or 8. (basically it’s the charge!!!)
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Oxidation/“Magic” Numbers
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Oxidation Numbers negative If an atom gains electrons, it has a negative oxidation number. positive If an atom loses electrons, it has a positive oxidation number.
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Oxidation Numbers For Bonding: Oxidation means CHARGE!!!!!!
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What is the oxidation number (charge) of: HBa SF NaSi
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group charge A polyatomic ion is a covalently bonded group of atoms with either a positive or negative charge We will revisit this later, but understand what it is.
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