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Published byRalf Fowler Modified over 9 years ago
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Covalent Bonding and Molecules
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Atoms and Stability Atoms bond with other atoms to become stable.
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Sections in a Periodic Table
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Types of Bonding Type of BondingDescriptionExample IonicBetween metal ions (cations) and non-metal ions (anions) via electrostatic attraction Salts - Sodium chloride, calcium hydroxide, magnesium oxide, etc. MetallicBetween metal atoms due to a ‘sea of delocalised electrons’ around them. Any metal; copper, iron, zinc, magnesium, aluminium CovalentBetween non-metal atoms via sharing of valence electrons Gases, water, alcohol, diamond, graphite, sugars,….
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Covalent Bonding Covalent bonding occurs when pairs of electrons are shared by atoms. They share electrons to have a fully filled valence shell and hence become stable. Atoms need 8 electrons in their valence shell except for hydrogen that needs 2 electrons to become stable. Non-metal atoms are held by covalent bonds. It differs from ionic bonds in that there is no transfer of electrons A group of atoms joined by covalent bonds is called a molecule. To assist in covalent bonding, need to draw electron dot diagram.
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Electron Dot Diagrams
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Lewis Diagram of Water molecule
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Example 2: Hydrogen chloride (HCl) molecule Name: Hydrogen chloride Formula: HCl Atoms bonded via covalent bonds: 1H and 1 Cl Electron dot diagrams (shows only the valence electron): Hydrogen (1 e) H chlorine (17e) Arrange the atoms…… H will take its e’ to the site where Cl has unpaired electron (that is, to the right side of Cl).
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Lewis Diagram of a HCl molecule
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Terminology Bonding Electrons. Are unpaired electrons take part in covalent bonding. Lone pair Electrons Are paired electrons do not take part in bonding. Aka non-bonding electrons.
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Lewis Diagrams Diagrams of molecules that show electrons in terms of dots and crosses either as bonding or non-bonding electrons. A way to show covalent bonding. Don’t draw dash lines.
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Lewis Diagram Example:
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Structural formula Diagram of molecules with dash lines to represent covalent bonds between atoms. Often shows the non-bonding e’s.
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Structural Formula Example:
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Activity: Complete the worksheet
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Double and Triple Bonds For some molecules, merely a single bond is not enough to make them achieve a fully filled valence shell and become stable. They form a double or a triple bond to gain stability.
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Double and Triple Bonds
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How to draw Double and Triple Bonds TIP Draw the electron dot diagrams Move atoms to share one unpaired e’ Check for octet (do the atoms have 8 e’s?) If not, utilise another unpaired e’ Check for octet Repeat if necessary.
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Double and Triple Bonds
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