DNA Take out the chem review sheet In the molecular model kit, try to figure out what element each...
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Transcript of DNA Take out the chem review sheet In the molecular model kit, try to figure out what element each...
DNA•Take out the chem review sheet
•In the molecular model kit, try to figure out what element each color represents
•How can you make double bonds using the kit?
•What do the molecular model kits not show?
Chemistry ReviewYou 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
Fly around the nucleus•Each element has a unique number of
protons (atomic number)
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”
Electron Shells
• Each orbital can hold 2 electrons
• The innermost shell of orbitals is filled first
• Electrons are distributed to each orbital in a shell before filling each orbital
• The outermost shell is called the valence shell
Electron Shells Con.
•The first shell has only 1 orbital, so it can hold only 2 electrons
The 2nd/3rd Shell
•Consists of 4 orbitals, so each shell can hold 8 electrons
2. Draw Helium atom
Draw on your Whiteboard
•A neutral boron atom (for the nucleus you can just write B)
•A neutral fluorine atom
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
Draw
•A neutral magnesium atom
•A neutral phosphorus atom
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
3. Draw Fluorine Ion (fluoride)
Draw the ions on your Whiteboard
•Na+
•P3-
•Si2-
•H+
5. Element Symbol # of
protons# of electrons
Charge # valence electrons
C Neutral
Oxygen 10
7 Neutral
18 2+
1-
3-
Na 11
Nitrogen 5
Filling Valence Shells
•Generally chemical reactions occur that fill valence electron shells
•Either by gaining/losing electrons OR
•By sharing electrons with other atoms
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
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)
The column can be used to figure out how many bonds an atom will normally form
4 3 2 1 0
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)
7. Draw and/or make: H2O C2H6 NH3 CCl3OH H2NCH2OH
On your Whiteboard Draw or make:C3H8 CH3OH CF2O2H2
8. Draw and or make:O2 N2 C2H2 CO2 H2NCHCO2H
On your whiteboard draw and or make:H2CO3 HCN H2C2Cl2 HNO
9. 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
NH4+ CO3
2- H3O+ OH -
6b.Polar vs. Non-Polar Covalent Bonds
Nonpolar 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
Non-Polar Polar
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
6c. Ionic Bonding
•Opposites attract!
•Significantly weaker than a covalent bond
•Can also occur between ionic molecules
11. Intermolecular Bonds (my bad on the worksheet)•Between 2 different molecules•I.e. hydrogen bonds in water•Much weaker than intramolecular bonds•aka intermolecular forces, attractions
Hydrogen Bonds
•Weak attraction between the partial charges of polar covalently bonded molecules
•In water, between O and H Means partial