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Chapter 7 and 8 Ionic and Covalent Bonding
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Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Jan 13, 2015

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Tia Hohler

chemistry, ionic and covalent bonding, electron configurations, counting molecules and atoms.
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Page 1: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Chapter 7 and 8Ionic and Covalent Bonding

Page 2: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

7.1 Ions• Valence Electrons are the electrons in

the highest occupied energy level of an element’s atoms.

• The number of valence electrons determines the chemical properties of an element.

• To find the number of valence electrons in an atom of a representative element, look at the group number. (see table 7.1)

Page 3: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 4: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Valence Electrons

• Valence electrons are usually the only electrons used in chemical bonds, so they are show in electron dot structures.

• In forming compounds, atoms tend to achieve the electron configuration of a noble gas.

• This is called the Octet Rule.

• All atoms want to have 8 electrons in their outer or valence shell.

Page 5: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Formation of Cations

• Atoms of the metallic elements tend to lose their valence shell electrons leaving 8 in the next level down.

• An atom’s loss of valence of electrons produces a cation, or positively charged ion.

• Remember, an ion is a charged atom that has lost or gained electrons during the chemical bonding process.

Page 6: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Na

Neutral Sodium Atom

+Whoa…I just got smaller…

Page 7: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Cl

Neutral Chlorine Atom

-Now I’m bigger and stronger….

Page 8: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 9: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Transition Metals

• For transition metals, the charges of cations may vary.

• For example, elements such as iron, nickel and copper may lose 1 to three electrons depending on the chemical compound.

Page 10: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Formation of Anions• A anion is an atom or group of atoms with a

negative charge.

• The gain of a negatively charged electron by a neutral atom will create an anion.

• Non-metals typically form anions.

• The name of the anion is not the same as the name of the atom.

• It usually ends in –ide. (See table 7.2)

Page 11: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 12: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Vocabulary Cards

• Valence electron

• Octet Rule

• Transition Metal

Page 13: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

SUM IT UPName the following ions properly.

F-

Cl-

Ca+2

O-2

Page 14: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Electron Configurations

• An electron configuration is a way to show the electrons in a particular atom in the proper order.

• Since electrons are arranged in shells, each shell has a different name.

• Use the periodic table to figure out the electron configuration for any atom.

Page 15: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 16: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

LET’S PRACTICE!

1s2 2s1

1s2 2s2 2p5

1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p3

Page 17: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 18: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Vocabulary Cards

• Electron configuration

Page 19: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

POST IT UP

What is the electron configuration for carbon?

I GOT THIS! I NEED HELP!

Page 20: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

7.2 Ionic Bonds and Ionic Compounds

• Compounds composed of cations and anions are called ionic compounds.

• Ionic compounds are usually composed of a a metal and other nonmetals.

• Although they are composed of ions, they are electrically neutral…meaning no charges or their charges cancel out.

• Bonds that hold ionic compounds together are called ionic bonds.

Page 21: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 22: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Formula Units

• A chemical formula shows the kinds and numbers of atoms in the smallest representative unit of a substance.

• A formula unit is the lowest whole-number ratio of ions in an ionic compound.

• The chemical formula is not always the lowest whole number ratio.

Page 23: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Let’s Practice

• How many kinds of atoms are in each of these ionic compounds?

• NaCl

• MgCl2• Ca(OH)2

• Ca3(PO4)2

Page 24: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Properties of Ionic Compounds

• Most ionic compounds are crystalline solids at room temperature.

• Ionic compounds generally have high melting points.

• Ionic compounds can conduct an electric current when melted or dissolved in water.

Page 25: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Vocabulary Cards

• Ionic Bond

• Formula Unit

Page 26: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

SUM IT UP

How many kinds of each of these atoms are in this compound?

Ca (C2H6O2)2

Page 27: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

8.1 Molecular Compounds.• Some compounds are not ionic.• Instead of giving or taking electrons, these

compounds share electrons to complete their Octet.

• This is called a covalent bond.• A molecule is a neutral groups of atoms joined by

a covalent bond.• A diatomic molecule is a molecule consisting of

only two atoms.• A compound composed of molecules is called a

molecular compound.

Page 28: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Molecular Formulas

• A molecular formula is the chemical formula of a molecular compound.

• It shows how many of each element a molecule contains.

• A molecular formula does not tell you about a molecule’s structure.

Page 29: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

8.2 The Nature of Covalent Bonding

• In forming covalent bonds, electron sharing usually occurs so that atoms attain the electron configuration of a noble gas.

• Combinations of nonmetallic elements in groups 4A, 5A, 6A and 7A are likely to form covalent bonds.

• They share electrons to achieve an octet like a noble gas.

Page 30: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 31: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 32: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Diagrams• An electron dot diagram represents the

shared pairs of electrons in a molecule.

• Each bond is two electrons or two dots.

• A structural formula represents the covalent bonds by dashes and shows the arrangement of the atoms.

• Each dash will equal two electrons.

• A pair of valence electrons not shared between atoms is called an unshared pair, lone pair or nonbonding pair.

Page 33: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Lone unshared pairs

Page 34: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Polyatomic ions

• A polyatomic ion is a tightly bound group of atoms that has a positive or negative charge and behaves like a unit.

• A group of atoms may be covalently bonded as a polyatomic ion but since the whole unit has a charge, it can bond with other charged ions.

Page 35: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 36: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Vocabulary Cards

• Covalent bond

• Molecule

• Polyatomic ion

• Unshared pair

Page 37: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

SUM IT UP

Draw the structural diagram for water.

Page 38: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

8.4 Polar Bonds and Molecules• Covalent bonds involve sharing between atoms.• However, some atoms are more electronegative

than others meaning they tend to attract more electrons than other atoms.

• When all the electrons are shared equally, it is a nonpolar covalent bond.

• When one atom attracts electrons more strongely than the other atom, a polar covalent bond forms.

• The atom that attracts more electrons become slightly negative while the other becomes slightly positive.

• This is NOT the same as an ionic bond with normal charges!

Page 39: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 40: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Hydrogen Bonds• Hydrogen bonds occur when a hydrogen that

is covalently bonded to another atom will be weakly attracted to another atom on another molecule.

• The partial positive charge of the hydrogen in the polar molecule, gets attracted to the partially negative charge on another molecule.

• Water usually forms hydrogen bonds.

• As a result, life is possible.

Page 41: Chapter 7 and 8 notes
Page 42: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Vocabulary Cards

•Polar molecule

•Hydrogen bond

Page 43: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

POST IT UP

I GOT THIS! I NEED HELP!

Why is water polar?

Page 44: Chapter 7 and 8 notes

Science Swag

Create an accurate model for a chemical compound. Label the atoms and the bonds. Bigger models with more atoms get more points.