Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force...

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Chemical Bonding Chapter 8

Transcript of Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force...

Page 1: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Chemical Bonding

Chapter 8

Page 2: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

8.1 Types of Bonds

Page 3: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Ionic and Covalent Bonds

• Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule

• Ionic Bonds are bonds between ions held together by electrostatic force.

• Covalent Bonds are where electrons are shared between atoms.

Page 4: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

PROBLEM

Identify which type of Chemical Bond is most likely in the following.• NaF• ClO2

• FeSO4

• H2O

• NaNO3

Page 5: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Polar and Nonpolar Covalent Bonds

• Rarely are covalent bonds a completely equal sharing.

• Polarity is the degree of transfer from one member of a covalent bond to the other.

• Nonpolar Covalent Bonds have little to no polarity and share the electrons equally.

• Polar Covalent Bonds have detectable polarity and have an uneven sharing of electrons.

Page 6: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Polarity Continuum

Page 7: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Electronegativity

• Electronegativity – The ability for an atom to bonding electrons.

• Varies in a periodic fashion• The greater the difference in

electronegativity the greater the polarity of the bond.

Page 8: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Electronegativity

Page 9: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

8.2 Ionic Bonds

Page 10: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Lewis Symbols

• Lewis Symbols – A shorthand to show the valence electrons of an atom.

• Examples

Page 11: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

PROBLEM

Draw the Lewis Structures of the following.

• NaF

• CaCl2

• Be3N2

Page 12: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Structure of Ionic Crystals

• An ionic crystal is an arrangement of ions that maximize attraction and minimize repulsion of ions.

• The crystals structure makes ionic solids very hard, brittle and poor conductors.

• Crystal structure also accounts for high melting and boiling temperatures.

Page 13: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

8.3 Covalent Bonds

Page 14: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

The Octet Rule

• In the Main Group elements, stability is reached by becoming isoelectronic with the noble gases.

• This completes the Valance Shell for the principal energy level

• Since the s and p orbitals take eight electrons, this is called the octet rule.

Page 15: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Octet Examples

Na Ca S Cl

Page 16: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Lewis Formulas for Diatomics

Page 17: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Valence Electrons

Page 18: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

PROBLEM

• Give Possible Identities for each X.

X X XCl

Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl ClCl

Page 19: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Structures of Covalent Molecules

• Write the Skeleton Equation• Sum the Valance Electrons and

determine the total• Place two electrons for each single bond• If you have remaining valance

electrons, add them as unshared pairs to satisfy unfilled octets

• Use double and triple bonds to satisfy octets on the central atoms

Page 20: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

EXAMPLE

• Carbon Dioxide

Page 21: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

PROBLEM

• H3CCN

• NH2OH

Page 22: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Resonance

Page 23: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

PROBLEM

• Nitric Oxide, N2O, NNO arrangement.

Page 24: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Exceptions to the Octet Rule

• Odd Number of Electrons (NO)

• Unfilled Octet (BH3)

• More than eight electrons around the central atom.

Page 25: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Bonding in Carbon Compounds

• Carbon’s versatility comes from its four valance electrons.

• Carbon can readily bond with itself at “normal” temperatures

Page 26: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

8.4 Shape of Molecules

Page 27: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

The VSEPR Theory

• Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion Theory says that pairs of electrons will try to get as far away from each other as possible.

• You use the Lewis structure to determine a general structure then fine tune the model.

Page 28: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Predicting the Shape of Molecules

• Draw the Lewis formula• Count the number of bonds and

unshared pairs on the central atom• The sum gives you the parent

formula (Linear, Trigonal Planar, Tetrahedral)

• Consider on the bonded atoms to determine the sub-shape (AX2, AX3, AX4)

Page 29: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

EXAMPLE

• CH4

• NH3

• H20

Page 30: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

PROBLEM

• Determine the shape.• CO3

2-

• SCl2

Page 31: Chemical Bonding Chapter 8. 8.1 Types of Bonds Ionic and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonds are the force that holds atoms together in a compound or molecule.

Polarity of Molecules

• If the bonds are polar and the molecular shape is not symmetrical the molecule is polar.

• If the bonds are not polar or the molecule is symmetrical the molecule is nonpolar.