Title: Molecular Bonds
1Molecular Bonds
- (Putting Elements Together)
2Molar Mass
- Each atom has an atomic mass
- Molar mass is the atomic mass of all the atoms in
the molecule summed together - For Example
- H2O 2 x Atomic Mass of H
- 1 x Atomic Mass of O
3Counting Atoms in a Molecule
- In the example, NH3, the subscript 3 only applies
to the hydrogen. - Therefore there is 1 N and 3 H in ammonia
- In the example, 3Ca3(PO4)2, the number of atoms
changes due to the Coefficient in front of the
molecule - The 3 is multiplied to the Ca, P and O
- The subscript 2, multiplies the P and O
- 3Ca3(PO4)2
43 Ca3 ( P O4 ) 2
- This means that
- there are 3 x 3 Ca,
- 3 x 2 P and 3 x (4 x 2) O
5Bonds. . .
6No, not that kind bonds between atoms to form
molecules
- It all depends upon the atoms valence (outer
shell) electrons - These are the e- in the last Energy Level (n
1 through 7) - Figure these out using the Periodic Chart and/or
Lewis Dot Diagrams
7The Roman Numerals Tell You How Many Valence
Electrons for the Primary or Representative
Elements The Valence Electrons for the
Transition Elements Vary
- I II III IV V
VI VII VIII
8 9- Group I is monovalent II is divalent III is
trivalent IV is tetravalent V is back to being
trivalent (since three e- openings) VI is
divalent VII is monovalent and VIII has a
complete octet, so these seldom react or bond
10- Bond Types (In General)
- Pure or Non-Polar Covalent
- ? difference 0 to 0.5 on the Pauling EN Scale
- The pair of e- shared are done so equally
- Two nonmetals bonded together
- Polar Covalent
- A shared pair of e-, but not equally
- ? difference 0.5 to 1.6
- Molecule has Partial and Charges
- Ionic Bonds
- ? difference 1.7 or higher to the maximum of
4.0 - Metal bonded with a nonmetal
- Metallic Bonds are similar to Ionic Bonds
-
11Metallic Bonds
- Two or more metals mixed are called alloys
- Two major formats
- Interstitial and Substitutional
- These bonds permit the
- roaming of e- which creates
- a sea of dissociated e-
- Called the Electron Sea
- Model
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13Ionic Bonds
- These are the bonds between a metal and a
nonmetal - The metal Ion is positively charged and called a
cation - The nonmetal Ion is negatively charged and called
an anion - The bonded molecule should be neutrally charged
when finished
14Knowing where the metals and nonmetals are on the
table will make your life easier
15Lets take a moment to discuss polyatomic ions. .
.
- This is a molecule that acts as a cation or anion
- For example
- NH4 ammonium N3- azide
- ClO4- perchlorate CN- cyanide
- HCO3- bicarbonate OH- hydroxide
- CrzO7-2 chromate NO3- nitrate
- ClO3- chlorate C2H3O2- acetate
- Dont PANIC I gave a list to you!
16In an Ionic Bond one or more electrons are
lost or gained by the atoms involvedThis allows
the atoms to have a complete valence shell
following the octet rule
17- In an Ionic Compound balance the molecule using
the criss-cross rule - Mg 2 Cl-1
- Mg Cl2 The one is understood.
- This applies even if using a polyatomic ion
18- NH4 O-2
- (NH4)2O The parentheses are used to
keep -
the polyatomic together - Pb4 CO3-2
- Pb2 (CO3)4 and this can be
simplified by reducing the subscripts
to - Pb(CO3)2
19- Naming Ionic Compounds is really simple
- 1. Name the cation (metal) using its proper
name if it is a polyatomic, do the same - 2. Then, using the stem of the anion
(nonmetal), simply add the suffix ide - Zinc Chlorine Zinc Chloride
- Iron Oxygen Iron Oxide
- Lithium Cyanide Lithium Cyanide
- Ammonium Fluorine Ammonium Fluoride
- Cobalt Phosphorous Cobalt Phosphide
20- Transition Metals present an issue for balancing
and naming molecules since they can have varying
oxidation states - For example
- Manganese can be a 2 or 3
- Iron can be a 2 or 3
- Lead can be a 2, or even a 4
- Copper is a 1 or 2
- Gold is usually a 1 or 3
- And Hydrogen is a 1 or a -1!
21Transition Metals
- To determine the correct Roman Numeral to place
after the metal - Roman Numeral - (Charge
anion)(anions)
( cations) - This is needed because, for example,
- iron chloride can be either FeCl2 or FeCl3
- or iron (II) chloride or iron (III) chloride
-
22Therefore Ionic Bonds are
- Metal Nonmetal
- ion - ion
- cation anion
- monatomic monatomic or
- (except NH4) polyatomic
- left of steps right of steps
- Reactions are Exothermic
- Form Crystal Lattice Structures
23Covalent Compounds
- These can be monatomic or polyatomic compounds
- It is a bond between two nonmetals
- They share a pair of electrons
- They can be subgrouped into polar or nonpolar
- If a binary compound (2 atoms) use the same
naming rules as in Ionic Compounds
24- If it has more than two atoms need to use the
prefixes - Number Prefix Number Prefix
- 1 Mono 7 Hepta
- 2 Di 8 Octa
- 3 Tri 9 Nona
- 4 Tetra 10 Deca
- 5 Penta 11 Undeca
- 6 Hexa 12 Dodeca
25Naming Covalent Compounds
- Process
- Prefix Indicating full name of first
- nonmetal
- Prefix Indicating root name of second
nonmetal suffix ide - Watch for polyatomics and use their proper names
26For Example
- P4S10 becomes Tetraphosphorous Decasulfide
- P2O5 Becomes Diphosphorous Pentaoxide
- SF6 becomes Sulfur Hexafluoride
- SiBr4 becomes Silicon Tetrabromide
27Covalent Bonds can be Polar or Nonpolar
- A nonpolar has no discernable
- negative or positively charged sides
- (EN difference is 0)
- A polar covalent bond means one
- side is negative and the other positive
28- Electronegativity Percent Ionic Bond
- Difference Character Type
- 0.2 1 Non-polar
- 0.4 4 Covalent
- 0.5
- --------------------------------------------------
------------------------ - 0.6 9
- 0.8 15
- 1.0 22 Polar
- 1.2 30 Covalent
- 1.4 39
- --------------------------------------------------
------------------------ - 1.6 47 Ionic if metal/nonmetal
- 1.8 55 Polar Cov. if non/nonmetal
- 2.0 63
- --------------------------------------------------
------------------------ - 2.2 70
- 2.4 76 Pure Ionic
- 2.6 82
29- Some elements are able to form more than one
oxyanion (polyatomic ions that contain oxygen),
each containing a different number of oxygen
atoms. - For example, chlorine can combine with oxygen in
four ways to form four different oxyanions
ClO4-, ClO3-, ClO2-, and ClO- (Note that in a
family of oxyanions, the charge remains the same
only the number of oxygen atoms varies.) - The most common of the chlorine oxyanions is
chlorate, ClO3-. In fact, you will generally find
that the most common of an elements oxyanions
has a name with the form (root)ate.
30- The anion with one more oxygen atom than the
(root)ate anion is named by putting per- at the
beginning of the root and -ate at the end. For
example, ClO4- is perchlorate. - The anion with one fewer oxygen atom than the
(root)ate anion is named with -ite on the end of
the root. ClO2- is chlorite. - The anion with two less oxygen atoms than the
(root)ate anion is named by putting hypo- at the
beginning of the root and -ite at the end. ClO-
is hypochlorite.
31Oxyanion Example
- ClO- Hypochlorite
- ClO2- Chlorite
- ClO3- Chlorate
- ClO4- Perchlorate
-
32- Some compounds have common names as well as their
scientific names you should learn these and
others! - NO nitrogen monoxide nitric oxide
- H2O dihydrogen monoxide water
- NH3 nitrogen trihydride ammonia
- CH4 carbon tetrahydride methane
- C4H10 tetracarbon decahydride butane
33Some atoms are Diatomic KNOW THESE!
- H2 N2 O2 F2 Cl2 Br2 and I2
- and P is usually found as P4
- while Sulfur is found as S8
- Other elements will bond beyond the octet rule
like PCl5, and the noble gas Xe bonds with F in
XeF6, XeF2, XeF4, and XeO4 and this is due to a
thing called hypervalence or expanded octet
34Molecular Geometry
- The 3-Dimensional Shapes of Molecules depend upon
the valence e-s of the atoms involved - Valence Bond Theory and VSEPR Model both use the
same shapes - Basically they focus on covalent bonds with the
shared bonding pairs of electrons (BP) - The assumption is made that the molecule will
adopt a geometry to minimize the repulsion
between e-s
35 36Basic Geometry Bond Angles
- Linear 180o
- Trigonal Planar 120o
- Tetrahedral 109.5o
- Trigonal Bipyramidal 90o and
- 120o
- Octahedral 90o
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39Molecular Orbital Theory
- MOT uses atomic orbitals (AO), e- ?s and e-
density regions to examine bonds
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41This is the end of Part I
- Next
- Van der Waals and London Dispersion Forces
- Polarity
- Intermolecular Forces
- Lewis Dot Diagrams with Covalent Bonds
- Determining Molecular Structure
- Resonance Structures