Title: Chapter 7 Chemical Formulas and Bonding
1Chapter 7Chemical Formulas and Bonding
- How it all sticks together.
2Some Questions to Consider
- Why are so few elements (such as Au, S, N, O, Ag)
found in Nature in their free atomic state? - Why do atoms of different elements react to form
compounds? - What is happening in this process?
- How can we explain the tremendous number of
compounds that are known today? - Many of the answers will be found in Chapter 6
(Chemical Formulas and Bonding).
3Chapter 7 Objectives
- Describe the characteristics of an ionic bond.
- State and use the Octet Rule.
- Learn how to use Lewis Dot diagrams.
- Learn the types of ions.
- Describe the characteristics of a covalent bond.
- Describe the difference between polar and
nonpolar covalent bonds. - Write names for ionic compounds, molecular
compounds and acids.
47-1 Ionic Bonding
- Recall how ions form
- Metals lose electrons to become positive ions
(cations). (Which ones do they lose?) - M ? M1 e1-
- Nonmetals gain electrons to become negative ions
(anions). (Where do they go?) - X e1- ? X1-
- Positive ions are attracted to negative ions.
- Opposites attract.
- Ionic Compound one that is composed entirely of
ions. - Total charge balances to zero.
- That is, total () charges total (-) charges
Zero
5Ionic Bonding Example
- Sodium (Na) is a poisonous, very reactive metal.
- Chlorine (Cl2) is a poisonous, very reactive
nonmetal. - They combine explosively to form salt, NaCl.
- NaCl is composed of Na1 and Cl1- ions, and it is
harmless. - Na ? Na1 e1-
- Cl e1- ? Cl-
- Overall Na Cl ? NaCl
6The Octet Rule
- Atoms tend to gain, lose or share electrons in
order to acquire a full set (8) of valence
electrons. - EXAMPLE Look at the sodium and chlorine atoms
in forming salt. (Fig. 7-5, p. 228)
7The Role of Valence Electrons
- Note that the valence electrons were involved in
this change, NOT the core electrons. - Why? (Which orbitals electrons are encountered
first when two atoms interact?) - Chemists focus on the valence electrons (outer
electrons) to understand the chemistry of atoms. - To aid us, we use shorthand diagrams, called
Lewis Dot Diagrams, where dots represent the
valence electrons around an atom. - Lets do some examples.
8Lewis Dot Diagrams
- Write the element symbol.
- Use dots to show the valence electrons (alone or
in pairs) around the symbol. - Sodium would be Na with one dot.
- Chlorine would be Cl with seven dots.
- The reaction of sodium with chlorine would be
written as - Na. .Cl ? Na. .Cl ? Na1 .Cl1-
.
9Lewis Dot Diagrams (Practice)
Practice doing this!
10Types of Ions
- Monoatomic Cations
- Na, Mg2, Al3
- Fe2 Iron(II), Fe3 Iron(III)
- Monoatomic Anions
- F-, Cl-, Br-
- Polyatomic Ions
- NH4, OH-, NO3-, SO42-, CO32-, PO43-
- See list of ions you MUST learn!
- Pages 231 232
11Facts About Ionic Compounds
- Binary Ionic Compound - contains ions of only two
elements. (e.g. NaCl) - Empirical Formula the formula of a compound
with the lowest whole-number ratio of the
elements. - NaCl (NOT Na2Cl2 or Na3Cl3 or Na100Cl100)
- The net charge of a neutral compound must equal
zero, which tells us the ion ratio. (Ca2 Cl1-
needs CaCl2 as the correct formula.) - Crisscross method helps write ionic formulas.
- Ba2 Br1- becomes BaBr2
- Al3 NO31- becomes Al(NO3)3
- PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE!
12Crisscross Method for Ionic Compounds
- Ionic compounds must have a net ionic charge of
zero (neutral). - The total and charges must cancel.
- Keep polyatomic ions intact!
- Use crisscross method to write formulas
- The charge superscript becomes the subscript of
the opposite ion, indicating the number of ions. - Ba2 Br1- becomes BaBr2 2 with 2(1-) 0
- Al3 NO31- becomes Al(NO3)3 3 with 3(1-) 0
- NH41 and SO42- becomes (NH4)2SO4 2(1) with 2-
0 - PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE!
13Naming Ionic Compounds
- Chemists name compounds on the basis of the atoms
and bonds present. - Ionic compounds are named from their elements or
polyatomic ions. - Cations () are named first (usually an element
name). - If it can have more than one charge, use Roman
numerals to indicate which ion is actually
present. - FeCl3 is iron(III) chloride FeCl2 is iron(II)
chloride. - Change the ending of the anion to ide (unless a
polyatomic ion is present). - NaCl is sodium chloride.
- Al2O3 is aluminum oxide.
- Ba(NO3)2 is barium nitrate.
- K2SO4 is potassium sulfate.
- What is NiBr2? Sr3(PO4)2? FeI2?
14Hydrates
- Hydrate Ionic compound that absorbs water into
its solid form. - Recall the blue copper sulfate lab when we
studied chemical/physical changes? - Anhydrous Water-free substance.
- Name these ionic compounds to reflect the water
of hydration. - Name the compound in the normal way.
- Add the word hydrate and a prefix term to show
the number of water molecules (degree of
hydration). - See Fig. 7-24 on page 246.
- Di-, tri- tetra-, penta- etc.
- MgSO4 7 H2O is magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
- What is the formula for copper(II) sulfate
pentahydrate?
15Properties of Ionic Compounds
- High melting points (usually).
- NaF (996 C), NaCl (801 C)
- This indicates very strong ionic bonding.
- Very brittle.
- Shatter, or cleave, in fixed paths.
- Example Rock salt.
- Water soluble (usually).
- Water breaks the ionic bonds.
- Aqueous solutions conduct electricity because the
ions are free to move about in the water. - Conduct electricity when molten (liquid).
- Ions are freed from the crystal structure
(lattice). - Do not conduct electricity when solid.
- Ions are held firmly in place, so they simply
vibrate.
167-2 Covalent Bonding
- A covalent bond is formed by a shared pair of
electrons between two atoms. - Molecule group of atoms united by a covalent
bond. - Molecular Substance a material made up of
molecules. - Molecular formula chemical description of a
molecular compound or molecule. - Structural Formula a formula that specifies
which atoms are bonded to each other in a
molecule. - Lewis Structures molecular structure based on
Lewis Dot diagrams.
17Describing Covalent Bonds
- Draw Lewis diagrams, including unshared pairs of
electrons. - Use a dash for each pair of electrons in a
bond. - Examples ClCl becomes Cl-Cl.
- Single covalent bonds
- CC or simply C-C (Note the dash.)
- Double covalent bonds
- CC or simply CC (Note the double dash.)
- Triple covalent bonds
- CC or simply C?C (Note the triple dash.)
18Properties of Covalent Compounds
- Low melting points (usually).
- Methane, (CH4) is a gas at room temperature
oils are liquids at room temperature wax melts
at 100C. - This indicates very weak molecular association.
- Soft.
- Wax feels may be deformed even as a solid.
- Insoluble in water (usually).
- Water cannot break the covalent bonds.
- Aqueous solutions do not conduct electricity (no
ions are free to move about in the water). - Do not conduct electricity when molten (liquid).
- Again, there are no ions to move about.
- Do not conduct electricity when solid.
- No ions!
19Exceptions to the Octet Rule
- Atoms with less than an octet.
- Boron compounds.
- Atoms with more than an octet.
- Atoms with d-electrons, such as sulfur.
- Molecules with an odd number of electrons.
- So called Radicals like nitroxyl, NO.
20Properties of Covalent Bonds
- Remember electronegativity? (What is it?)
- The ability of an atom to attract electrons in a
chemical bond. - Fr has the lowest (0.7) and F has the highest
(4.0) on the Pauling scale. - Electronegativity differences (delta EN or
?EN) dictate which atom in a bond more strongly
attracts the electrons. - See Fig 7-20, page 242, and the following slide.
- Chemists use lower case Greek letter delta (d) to
mean a partial or small difference.
21Bond Type by Electronegativity(Use the
electronegativity difference, ?EN, to predict the
bond type.)
Note that a large ?EN means that it is an ionic
bond. Electrons have transferred from one atom
to another.
227-3 Naming Chemical Compounds
- Ionic compounds are named from their elements or
polyatomic ions. - Hydrates have water in their solid structure, but
anhydrous substances do not. - Molecular compounds are named using prefixes to
indicate the number of atom in the formula. - Acids have special names that must be memorized
(Fig 7-27, pg 249). - PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE!
23Naming Molecular Compounds
- Use the element names and prefixes to indicate
the number of atoms in the formula. - Di-, tri-, tetra-, etc.
- CO is carbon monoxide. (Mono is not used for
the first element generally.) - CO2 is carbon dioxide.
- N2O is dinitrogen monoxide.
- N2O4 is dinitrogen tetroxide. (not usually
tetraoxide because it is hard to say!) - Name N2O5. SO3. BF3. PF5
- Many molecular compounds have common names.
- Dihydrogen monoxide is ______?
- Trihydrogen mononitride is ammonia.
24Naming Common Acids
- Acids are molecular substances that dissolve in
water to produce hydrogen ions (H). - Acids have special names that must be memorized
(Fif. 7-27, page 249), but focus on these and
their anions - Hydrofluoric, hydrochloric, hydrobromic,
hydroiodic, - Nitric
- Sulfuric
- Carbonic
- Phosphoric
- Acetic
25Did we meet the Chapter 7 Objectives?
- Describe the characteristics of an ionic bond.
- State and use the Octet Rule.
- Learn how to use Lewis Dot diagrams.
- Learn the types of ions.
- Describe the characteristics of a covalent bond.
- Describe the difference between polar and
nonpolar covalent bonds. - Write names for ionic compounds, molecular
compounds and acids.