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Electrons & Bonding Chapters 7 and 8
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Valence Electrons Electrons located in the outermost energy level (the last shell) Number of valence electrons = group number
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We only show valence electrons because these are the electrons involved with bonding. The only exception to this rule is He, which has a full outer shell with only 2 valence electrons (remember that the first energy level only holds 2 electrons). Electron dot structures use dots to represent the valence electrons in an atom.
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Why are noble gases unreactive in chemical reactions? – They have a full valence shell which makes them stable Other atoms want to be like the noble gases. They want to have 8 valence electrons. This is known as the Octet Rule, which states that atoms tend to achieve the same number of valence electrons as a noble gas (8). Metals tend to lose valence electrons, while nonmetals tend to gain or share valence electrons.
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Lewis Dot Diagrams Use dots to represent the valence electrons Steps to drawing dot diagrams: – Write the chemical symbol – Determine the number of valence electrons – Draw out the dots in the following configuration Cl
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Ions – atoms that carry a charge because electrons have been gained or lost Cations – positively charged ions Electrons lost Metals lose all of their valence electrons Anions – negatively charged ions Electrons gained Non-metals gain enough electrons to fill out their outer shell (8 electrons total)
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Cation Formation Sodium AtomSodium Ion 11 p + 12 n 0 11 p + 12 n 2 e - 8 e - 1 e -
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Anion Formation Fluorine Atom 9 p + 10 n 0 Fluoride Ion 9 p+ 10 n 0 2 e - 7 e - 8 e - 1 e -
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Ionic Bonding Repeating 3-D patterns Very stable Electrically neutral High melting & boiling point Conduct electric current Metal + non-metal Cation + anion Forms a salt (NaCl, MgCl 2 ) Elements held together by electrostatic forces Crystalline solids
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Ionic Bonding Cations ______ valence electrons. Anions ______ valence electrons. Show the movement of electrons using arrows. lose gain DIRECTIONS: DRAW DOT DIAGRAM MOVE ELECTRONS FROM METAL TO NON-METAL USING ARROWS MAKE SURE ALL DOTS ARE REMOVED FROM METAL MAKE SURE NON-METAL HAS 8 DOTS
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Examples NaCl NaCl Na O Na 2 O Mg O MgO
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Mg N N Mg 3 N 2
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Covalent Bonding Single bond (1 pr. shared electrons) F Double bond (2 pr. shared electrons) O Triple bond (3 pr. shared electrons) N 2 non-metals Electrons are shared Lower melting points and boiling points Diatomic molecules: two molecules of the same element chemically combined (H 2,Cl 2, I 2, F 2, Br 2, O 2, N 2 )
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Covalent Bonding Two ____________. Form bonds by ___________ electrons. Show how electrons are shared with circles. nonmetals sharing DIRECTIONS: DRAW DOT DIAGRAM SHOW HOW UNPAIRED (SINGLE) ELECTRONS ARE SHARED WITH CIRCLES. MAKE SURE EACH ATOM HAS EIGHT ELECTRONS TOTAL.
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P Unshared electron pairs Cl PCl 3
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C O O CO 2
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C HH CH 4 H H
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Bonding Theories VSEPR – valence shell electron pair repulsion theory – Electrons will shift so they are as far apart from each other as possible – Think of magnets (electrons have a negative charge, so they repel each other) – This repulsion of electrons causes the molecules to “bend” giving them different shapes
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Polarity Polar Covalent – Covalent bond between atoms in which the electrons are shared unequally – The more electronegative element is slightly negative and the less electronegative element is slightly positive. HCl δ+ δ- – HCl H 2 O δ- δ- – δ+ O δ+H – O– OH
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Polarity Con’t. Non-polar Covalent – Occurs when the atoms in the bond pull equally on each other – The bonding electrons are shared equally H – H Br – Br Cl ClC Cl Cl
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Metallic Bonding Between 2 non-metals Results in alloys (metal mixtures) Solids at room temperature Valence electrons are free- floating and loosely attracted to the metal cations – “sea of electrons” Good conductors of electricity Ductile Maleable
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Sea of Electrons
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