Title: CHEMICAL BONDING
1CHEMICAL BONDING
- IONIC BONDS
- COVALENT BONDS
- HYDROGEN BONDS
- METALLIC BONDS
2IONIC BONDING
3IONIC BONDING
When an atom of a nonmetal takes one or more
electrons from an atom of a metal so both atoms
end up with eight valence electrons
4IONIC BONDING
IS THE COMPOUND AN IONIC COMPOUND?
Mg N
3
2
5IONIC BOND FORMATION
Non-Metal
Metal
Neutral atoms come near each other. Electron(s)
are transferred from the Metal atom to the
Non-metal atom. They stick together because of
electrostatic forces, like magnets.
6IONIC BONDING
ION any atom with more or less electrons that
it is supposed to have
Remember that the number of electrons is
supposed to be equal to the number of Protons if
the atom has a neutral charge
7IONIC BONDING
- Metals will tend to lose electrons and become
- POSITIVE CATIONS
8IONIC BONDING
- Nonmetals will tend to gain electrons and become
- NEGATIVE ANIONS
9IONIC BONDING
- Na1 is called a sodium ion
- The 1 symbol means it
- has lost one electron
10IONIC BONDING
- Mg2 is called a magnesium ion
- The 2 symbol means it
- has lost two electron
11IONIC BONDING
- S-2 is called a sulfide ion
- The -2 symbol means it
- has gained two electron
12IONIC BONDING
- Cl-1 is called a chloride ion
- The -1 symbol means it
- has gained one electron
13IONIC BONDING
- POLYATOMIC IONS--a group of atoms that act like
one ion - NH41--ammonium ion
- CO3-2--carbonate ion
- PO4-3--phosphate ion
14IONIC BONDING
- POLYATOMIC IONS ACT JUST LIKE ANY OTHER NEGATIVE
ION WHEN BONDING
15IONIC BONDING
SODIUM SULFATE
16IONIC BONDING
3
17Properties of Ionic Compounds
- Crystalline structure.
- A regular repeating arrangement of ions in the
solid. - Ions are strongly bonded.
- Structure is rigid.
- High melting points- because of strong forces
between ions.
18Crystalline structure
The POSITIVE CATIONS stick to the NEGATIVE
ANIONS, like a magnet.
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
19Do they Conduct?
- Conducting electricity is allowing charges to
move. - In a solid, the ions are locked in place.
- Ionic solids are insulators.
- When melted, the ions can move around.
- Melted ionic compounds conduct.
- First get them to 800ºC.
- Dissolved in water they conduct.
20Ionic solids are brittle
21Ionic solids are brittle
- Strong Repulsion breaks crystal apart.
22COVALENT BONDING
23COVALENT BONDING
When an atom of one nonmetal shares one or more
electrons with an atom of another nonmetal so
both atoms end up with eight valence electrons
24COVALENT BOND FORMATION
When one nonmetal shares one or more electrons
with an atom of another nonmetal so both atoms
end up with eight valence electrons
25COVALENT BONDING
IS THE COMPOUND A COVALENT COMPOUND?
C O
2
YES since it is made of only nonmetal elements
26Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
27Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
28Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
29Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
30Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
31Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
32Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
33Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
- Both end with full orbitals
34Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
- Both end with full orbitals
F
F
8 Valence electrons
35Covalent bonding
- Fluorine has seven valence electrons
- A second atom also has seven
- By sharing electrons
- Both end with full orbitals
F
F
8 Valence electrons
36Single Covalent Bond
- A sharing of two valence electrons.
- Only nonmetals and Hydrogen.
- Different from an ionic bond because they
actually form molecules. - Two specific atoms are joined.
- In an ionic solid you cant tell which atom the
electrons moved from or to.
37How to show how they formed
- Its like a jigsaw puzzle.
- I have to tell you what the final formula is.
- You put the pieces together to end up with the
right formula. - For example- show how water is formed with
covalent bonds.
38Water
- Each hydrogen has 1 valence electron
- Each hydrogen wants 1 more
- The oxygen has 6 valence electrons
- The oxygen wants 2 more
- They share to make each other happy
39Water
- Put the pieces together
- The first hydrogen is happy
- The oxygen still wants one more
H
40Water
- The second hydrogen attaches
- Every atom has full energy levels
H
H
41Multiple Bonds
- Sometimes atoms share more than one pair of
valence electrons. - A double bond is when atoms share two pair (4) of
electrons. - A triple bond is when atoms share three pair (6)
of electrons.
42Carbon dioxide
- CO2 - Carbon is central atom ( I have to tell
you) - Carbon has 4 valence electrons
- Wants 4 more
- Oxygen has 6 valence electrons
- Wants 2 more
C
43Carbon dioxide
- Attaching 1 oxygen leaves the oxygen 1 short and
the carbon 3 short
C
44Carbon dioxide
- Attaching the second oxygen leaves both oxygen 1
short and the carbon 2 short
C
45Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
46Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
47Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
48Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
49Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
50Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
C
O
O
51Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
C
O
O
52Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
8 valence electrons
C
O
O
53Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
8 valence electrons
C
O
O
54Carbon dioxide
- The only solution is to share more
- Requires two double bonds
- Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond
8 valence electrons
C
O
O
55How to draw them
- Add up all the valence electrons.
- Count up the total number of electrons to make
all atoms happy. - Subtract.
- Divide by 2
- Tells you how many bonds - draw them.
- Fill in the rest of the valence electrons to fill
atoms up.
56Examples
N
- NH3
- N - has 5 valence electrons wants 8
- H - has 1 valence electrons wants 2
- NH3 has 53(1) 8
- NH3 wants 83(2) 14
- (14-8)/2 3 bonds
- 4 atoms with 3 bonds
H
57Examples
- Draw in the bonds
- All 8 electrons are accounted for
- Everything is full
H
N
H
H
58Examples
- HCN C is central atom
- N - has 5 valence electrons wants 8
- C - has 4 valence electrons wants 8
- H - has 1 valence electrons wants 2
- HCN has 541 10
- HCN wants 882 18
- (18-10)/2 4 bonds
- 3 atoms with 4 bonds -will require multiple bonds
- not to H
59HCN
- Put in single bonds
- Need 2 more bonds
- Must go between C and N
N
H
C
60HCN
- Put in single bonds
- Need 2 more bonds
- Must go between C and N
- Uses 8 electrons - 2 more to add
N
H
C
61HCN
- Put in single bonds
- Need 2 more bonds
- Must go between C and N
- Uses 8 electrons - 2 more to add
- Must go on N to fill octet
N
H
C
62Another way of indicating bonds
- Often use a line to indicate a bond
- Called a structural formula
- Each line is 2 valence electrons
H
H
O
H
H
O
63Structural Examples
- C has 8 electrons because each line is 2
electrons - Ditto for N
- Ditto for C here
- Ditto for O
H C N
H
C O
H
64Coordinate Covalent Bond
- When one atom donates both electrons in a
covalent bond. - Carbon monoxide
- CO
65Coordinate Covalent Bond
- When one atom donates both electrons in a
covalent bond. - Carbon monoxide
- CO
O
C
66Coordinate Covalent Bond
- When one atom donates both electrons in a
covalent bond. - Carbon monoxide
- CO
O
C
67Polar Bonds
- When the atoms in a bond are the same, the
electrons are shared equally. - This is a nonpolar covalent bond.
- When two different atoms are connected, the atoms
may not be shared equally. - This is a polar covalent bond.
- How do we measure how strong the atoms pull on
electrons?
68Electronegativity
- A measure of how strongly the atoms attract
electrons in a bond. - The bigger the electronegativity difference the
more polar the bond. - 0.0 - 0.3 Covalent nonpolar
- 0.3 - 1.67 Covalent polar
- gt1.67 Ionic
69How to show a bond is polar
- Isnt a whole charge just a partial charge
- d means a partially positive
- d- means a partially negative
- The Cl pulls harder on the electrons
- The electrons spend more time near the Cl
d
d-
H
Cl
70Polar Molecules
71Polar Molecules
- Molecules with a positive and a negative end
- Requires two things to be true
- The molecule must contain polar bonds
- This can be determined from differences in
electronegativity. - Symmetry can not cancel out the effects of the
polar bonds. - Must determine geometry first.
72Is it polar?
73Intermolecular Forces
- What holds molecules to each other
74Intermolecular Forces
- They are what make solid and liquid molecular
compounds possible. - The weakest are called van der Waals forces -
there are two kinds - Dispersion forces
- Dipole Interactions
- depend on the number of electrons
- more electrons stronger forces
- Bigger molecules
75Dipole interactions
- Depend on the number of electrons
- More electrons stronger forces
- Bigger molecules more electrons
- Fluorine is a gas
- Bromine is a liquid
- Iodine is a solid
76Dipole interactions
- Occur when polar molecules are attracted to each
other. - Slightly stronger than dispersion forces.
- Opposites attract but not completely hooked like
in ionic solids.
77Dipole interactions
- Occur when polar molecules are attracted to each
other. - Slightly stronger than dispersion forces.
- Opposites attract but not completely hooked like
in ionic solids.
78Dipole Interactions
d d-
79Hydrogen bonding
- Are the attractive force caused by hydrogen
bonded to F, O, or N. - F, O, and N are very electronegative so it is a
very strong dipole. - The hydrogen partially share with the lone pair
in the molecule next to it. - The strongest of the intermolecular forces.
80Hydrogen Bonding
81Hydrogen bonding
82MOLECULAR SHAPES
83VSepR tHEORY
ALENCE
HELL
VSEPR
LECTRON
AIR
EPULSION
84What Vsepr means
Since electrons do not like each other, because
of their negative charges, they orient themselves
as far apart as possible, from each other.
This leads to molecules having specific shapes.
85Things to remember
- Atoms bond to form an Octet (8 outer
electrons/full outer energy level) - Bonded electrons take up less space then
un-bonded/unshared pairs of electrons.
86HERE ARE THE RESULTING MOLECULAR SHAPES
87Linear
EXAMPLE BeF2
- Number of Bonds 2
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 2
- Bond Angle 180
88Trigonal Planar
EXAMPLE GaF3
- Number of Bonds 3
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 3
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 0
- Bond Angle 120
89Bent 1
EXAMPLE H2O
- Number of Bonds 2
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 2
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 2
- Bond Angle lt 120
90Bent 2
EXAMPLE O3
- Number of Bonds 2
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 2
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 1
- Bond Angle gt120
91Tetrahedral
EXAMPLE CH4
- Number of Bonds 4
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 4
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 0
- Bond Angle 109.5
92Trigonal Pyramidal
EXAMPLE NH3
- Number of Bonds 3
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 4
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 1
- Bond Angle lt109.5
93Trigonal bIPyramidal
EXAMPLE NbF5
- Number of Bonds 5
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 5
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 0
- Bond Angle lt120
94OCTAHEDRAL
EXAMPLE SF6
- Number of Bonds 6
- Number of Shared Pairs of Electrons 6
- Number of Unshared Pairs of Electrons 1
- Bond Angle 90
95Metallic Bonds
- How atoms are held together in the solid.
- Metals hold onto there valence electrons very
weakly. - Think of them as positive ions floating in a sea
of electrons.
96Sea of Electrons
- Electrons are free to move through the solid.
- Metals conduct electricity.
97Metals are Malleable
- Hammered into shape (bend).
- Ductile - drawn into wires.
98Malleable
99Malleable
- Electrons allow atoms to slide by.
100THE END