1 / 33

Molecules Compounds Chemical Reactions

Molecules Compounds Chemical Reactions. Molecules. two or more of same or different elements chemically combine. H (atom) +H (atom) H 2 (molecule). Compounds. two or more different atoms combine together to form a molecule called a compound.

Télécharger la présentation

Molecules Compounds Chemical Reactions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Molecules Compounds Chemical Reactions

  2. Molecules • two or more of same or different elements chemically combine H (atom) +H (atom) H2 (molecule)

  3. Compounds • two or more different atoms combine together to form a molecule called a compound 4H (atoms) + C (atom) CH4 (molecule) (methane)

  4. Chemical Reactions • when atoms combine or dissociate from other atoms: - new products are formed - chemical reactions are foundation of all life processes Chemical Bonds • formed when atoms unite chemically

  5. Bond Formation • energy relationship (not physical) • involves reactions between electrons of reacting atoms • electrons in outermost shell are most important in bonding

  6. Electrons • occupy specific regions in rotation around the nucleus of an atom • these regions vary in distances from the nucleus • each orbit around nucleus represents one electron shell or energy level

  7. Electrons (cont.) • each shell holds a certain maximumnumber of electrons • innermost shell nearest nucleus never holds more than 2 electrons • second shell holds 8 (rule of 8’s) • third 18 • higher shells (7) hold many more electrons

  8. Stability • atoms will react to maintain 8 electrons in their valence shell (except shell one which is full at 2 electrons) • if valence shell has less than 8 electrons the atom will gain, loose, or share electrons to remain stable

  9. Electrons • electrons in energy level closest to nucleus are most strongly attracted to its +charge • electrons farthest from nucleus or + charge are most likely to react with other atoms

  10. Bonding • most important electrons are those in outermost shell (valence shell) • inner shells do not necessarily take part in bonding

  11. Types of Chemical Bonds

  12. Ionic Bonds • formed when electrons are completely transferred from one atom to another • during bonding atoms gain or loose electrons • therefore atoms are no longer neutral • now called ions

  13. Ions • are atoms that have gained or lost electrons • negatively or positively charged particles • Two types of ions: - anion(-) atom that has gained electrons - cation (+) atom that has lost electrons

  14. Electrolytes • are ions in solution • ionic solution is capable of conducting electrical current

  15. Sodium(atomic number = 11) • valence shell has 1 electron • incomplete • if 1 electron is lost it will have more protons than electrons • +charge • cation

  16. Chlorine(atomic number = 17) • valence shell has 7 electrons • incomplete, needs one electron to fill valence shell • if 1 electron is gained it will have more electrons than neutrons • -charge • anion

  17. Ionic Bond - Sodium Chloride • sodium tends to give up its single electron in its valence shell • chlorine will pick up one electron to completely fill its valence shell

  18. Covalent Bonds

  19. Covalent Bonds • bonds in which atoms share electrons • more common bond in the body than ionic • electrons of combining atoms are neither lost or gained • electrons are shared

  20. Single Covalent Bond H2 (H H) • when two atoms share one pair of electrons (H-H) • valence electrons are shared • shared electrons orbit whole molecule and satisfy stability needs of both hydrogen atoms

  21. Double Covalent Bond Oxygen (O O) • occurs when two atoms share two pairs of electrons

  22. Triple Covalent Bond Nitrogen (N N) • occurs when three pairs of electrons are shared

  23. Nonpolar Covalent Bonds • electrons are shared equally between two atoms • strongest of all chemical bonds • electrons spend approximately equal time around each nucleus • Example: - carbon:carbon, and hydrogen:hydrogen bonds are nonpolar covalent

  24. Polar Covalent Bonds • unequal sharing of electrons between atoms • one atom attracts shared electrons more strongly than the other • Example: - hydrogen and oxygen in a molecule of water

  25. Hydrogen Bonds • attraction between partially (-) or (+) charged atoms • Examples: - exist between adjacent H2O molecules - between polarized regions of same large molecules (protein) - between two strands of a DNA molecule

  26. Chemical Reactions

  27. Chemical Reactions • involved in making or breaking bonds between atoms • new bonds are formed • total amount of atoms remains the same • new arrangement or combination

  28. Synthesis Reaction(anabolism) • two or more molecules or reactants bond together to form larger complex molecule • involve bond formation • energy-requiring reaction • growth/constructive • repair

  29. Synthesis Reaction(anabolism) • A + B AB • 2H + O H2O

  30. Decomposition Reaction(catabolism) • molecule is broken down into smaller parts • synthesis reaction in reverse • energy is released • destructive • Example: - digestion of foods into building blocks

  31. Decomposition Reaction(catabolism) • AB A+B • NaCl Na+ + Cl-

  32. Exchange Reaction • involve synthesis and decomposition reactions • bonds are made and broken • molecule parts switched

  33. Exchange Reaction • AB + CD AD + CB • Example: - iron-containing complex in RBC unloads carbon dioxide and picks up oxygen in lungs.

More Related