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Ionic Bonds

Ionic Bonds. Forming Salt. ~118 elements are listed on the periodic table. So does this mean there are only 118 different substances that exist?. How many elements are there?. No! Why?. Elements can combine with each other to form compounds.

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Ionic Bonds

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  1. Ionic Bonds Forming Salt

  2. ~118 elements are listed on the periodic table. So does this mean there are only 118 different substances that exist? How many elements are there? No! Why?

  3. Elements can combine with each other to form compounds. • Compound  A material formed by the chemical combination of elements in defined proportions.

  4. Why do elements combine?Full Outer Shell = Happy Atoms • Atoms are the most stable when their electron shells are full. • Which family of elements are the “happiest?” • Why don’t Noble Gases combine with any other elements? • They don’t need any electrons! Noble Gases

  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Some atoms have one or two extra valence electrons These atoms give up their electrons easily--which families are they in? Alkali metals Alkaline Earth Metals

  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Some atoms are really close to having a full shell These atoms only need one more electron to be full--which family are they in? Halides

  7. Formed when two or more atoms chemically bond together, the resulting compound is unique both chemically and physically from its parent atoms.  

  8. Let’s look at an example! Sodium metal Na Chlorine gas Cl Table salt NaCl

  9. Sodium and Chlorine Reaction

  10. Why do Na and Cl combine?

  11. Why do Na and Cl combine? Sodium transfers its electron to chlorine, chlorine takes sodium’s electron.

  12. Loss or gain of electrons forms ions. Na 11+ 10- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- 11p+ + +1 charge

  13. Loss or gain of electrons forms ions. Sodium is a positively charged ion because it LOST an electron.

  14. PLEASE REMEMBER! Ion formation only involves ELECTRONS being gained or lost. Positive ions are NOT formed by gaining protons!!!

  15. Loss or gain of electrons forms ions. Cl 17+ 18- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- 17p+ + -1 charge

  16. Chlorine is a negatively charged ion because it GAINED an electron.

  17. Opposites Attract • Ionic bonds form when there is an attraction between positive and negative ions. • Ionic bonds involve a metal(positive charge) and a nonmetal (negative charge)

  18. NaCl LiF H2O CaCl2 CO MgO C6H12O6 KBr Ionic (metalNa & nonmetal Cl) Ionic (metal Li & nonmetal F) Not (two nonmetals) Ionic (metal Ca & nonmetal Cl) Not (two nonmetals) Ionic (metal Mg & nonmetal O) Not (two nonmetals) Ionic (metal K & nonmetal Br) Ionic Compound or Not? (Click on this title for a periodic table.)

  19. Charges of Ions +1 +2 +3 -5 +4 -4 -3 +5 -2 -1 0

  20. What would you expect to bond in a 1:1 ratio? +1 +2 +3 -5 +4 -4 -3 +5 -2 -1 0

  21. Ionic compounds are… • Crystalline solids at room temperature. • Crystalline solid: atoms, molecules, or ions that are packed in a regularly ordered, repeating pattern extending in all three spatial dimensions.

  22. Ionic compounds… • Have high melting points and boiling points. • Why? The strong bonding force between negative and positive ions takes a lot of energy to break.

  23. Ionic compounds… • Conduct electrical current in molten or solution state. • To conduct electricity, free ions (charges) are needed.

  24. Can you explain this cartoon?

  25. Ionic Bonding Tutorial • http://www.teachersdomain.org/asset/lsps07_int_ionicbonding/

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