Chemistry Review

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Chemistry Review You need to remember some basic things

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Chemistry Review. You need to remember some basic things. The Atom. Smallest possible unit that maintains properties of the element Made of: Protons – positively charged particles Neutrons- neutral particles Together form the atomic nucleus Electrons- negatively charged particles - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chemistry Review

Page 1: Chemistry Review

Chemistry ReviewYou need to remember some basic things

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The Atom•Smallest possible unit that maintains

properties of the element•Made of:

▫Protons – positively charged particles▫Neutrons- neutral particles

Together form the atomic nucleus▫Electrons- negatively charged particles

Fly around the nucleus•Each element has a unique number of

protons (atomic number)

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Electron Orbitals/Shells•Electrons are found

in characteristic areas around the nucleus, called an orbital▫Each one represents

a different energy level

•Simplifying things, orbitals are grouped into “shells”

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Electron Shells•The innermost

shell is filled first

•Electrons are distributed to each orbital in a shell before filling each orbital

•The outermost shell is called the valence shell

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Electron Shells Con.•The first shell has only 1 orbital, so it can hold only 2 electrons

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The 2nd/3rd Shell•Consists of 4

orbitals, so each shell can hold 8 electrons

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Draw on your Whiteboard•A neutral boron atom (for the nucleus you can just write B)

•A neutral fluorine atom

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Using the Periodic Table• Ignore the D block (the metals)• The row tells you the # of shells the atom should have• The column tells you the # of valence electrons a neutral atom

should have in its valence shell

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Draw•A neutral magnesium atom

•A neutral phosphorus atom

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Ions•Aka charged atoms•+ ions occur when

there are more protons than electrons

•- ions occur when there are more electrons than protons

•Atoms can gain and lose electrons

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Draw the ions on your Whiteboard•Na+

•P3-

•Si2-

•H+

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Filling Valence Shells•Generally chemical reactions occur that

fill valence electron shells•Either by gaining/losing electrons

OR•By sharing electrons with other atoms

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6a. Covalent Bond•Sharing of electrons

between two atoms

•A single bond consists of 2 shared electrons, which occupy the valence shell of both atoms▫Double bond = 4

electrons▫Triple bond = 6

electrons

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Guidelines of Bonding•Atoms almost always

will end up with 8 electrons in their valence shell (may be lone pairs or shared electrons)

•So an atom that normally has 6 valence electrons needs to get 2 more from bonding

(only showing the valence electrons)

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The column can be used to figure out how many bonds an atom will normally form

4 3 2 1 0

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Lewis Structures• A line represents 2

electrons, usually shared in a covalent bond

• Dots represent electrons that are held by only one atom (lone pairs)

• Only valence electrons are shown

• Each atom should have a total of 8 electrons (except H and He which hold 2)

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Guidelines for Drawing Lewis Structures•Carbons make up core•Add Hs last (they can’t connect anything)

•Remember how many bonds each atom will make (using the periodic table

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On your Whiteboard Draw or make:C3H8 CH3OH CF2O2H2

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Draw : H3CCH2OH H2NCH2OH

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Double Bonds•Use double bonds or triple bonds

when there aren’t enough atoms to form the proper number of bonds

•i.e. oxygen O=O, if it was a single bond O would not have the correct number of bonds

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Draw and or make:N2 HCOOH HCN

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Drawing ionic molecules (think about total valence electrons present)C should bring 4 valence electrons, N should bring 5. If neutral there would be 9.BUT if it’s – charged there should be 10 total

Notice atoms won’t form the correct number of bonds

NH4+ H3O+ OH -

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6b.Polar vs. Non-Polar Covalent BondsNonpolar Polar

•Electrons shared equally

•Both atoms have similar electronegativity (affinity for electrons)

•Neither atom ends up with any charge

• Electrons are not shared equally

• 1 atom is more electronegative (O, F, N, Cl are the usual culprits)

• Electronegative atom ends up with a partial – charge since they have the electron more often

• Other atom ends up with a partial + charge as they are deprived of the electron

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Non-Polar Polar

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10. Ion Formation•Some atoms more

easily give up electrons (1st and 2nd columns) to end up with a full valence shell

•These electrons can be stripped by atoms in the 7th column (need 1 e)

•Forms ions

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6c. Ionic Bonding•Opposites attract!

•Significantly weaker than a covalent bond

•Can also occur between ionic molecules

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Hydrogen Bonds•Weak attraction between the partial

charges of polar covalently bonded molecules

•In water, between O and H Means partial

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