1 / 48

How Atoms Bond

How Atoms Bond. Chapter 17. Let’s Review. Electrons are arranged in energy levels. Electrons are arranged in energy levels. Electrons are arranged in energy levels. Take a Look at Helium. The Language of Chemistry. CHEMICAL ELEMENTS

lizina
Télécharger la présentation

How Atoms Bond

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. How Atoms Bond Chapter 17

  2. Let’s Review

  3. Electrons are arranged in energy levels

  4. Electrons are arranged in energy levels

  5. Electrons are arranged in energy levels

  6. Take a Look at Helium

  7. The Language of Chemistry CHEMICAL ELEMENTS -pure substances that cannot be decomposed by ordinary means to other substances

  8. Symbols of Elements • Use 1 or 2 letter abbreviations • Capitalize the first letter only • Examples • C Carbon Co Cobalt • N Nitrogen Ca Calcium • F Fluorine Br Bromine • O Oxygen Mg Magnesium

  9. The Periodic Table Dimitri Mendeleev 1834-1907

  10. The Periodic Table Helium 2 Atomic Number He e P P N N e 4.003 Atomic Mass Atomic mass 4 amu

  11. The Periodic Table Helium 2 Atomic Number He e P P N N e 4.003 Atomic Mass Atomic mass 4 amu

  12. The way the table is organized tells a lot about the elements’ properties

  13. Now… let’s combine all this information

  14. …and watch what happens!

  15. …and watch what happens!

  16. You’ve built this in class!

  17. The electrons in the outer rings are called “valence electrons”

  18. Valence electrons play an important role an element’s ability to form chemical bonds (chemical properties).

  19. How many e- are in the outer rings? Do you see the valence patterns? Valence Electrons 1 e- 2 e- 3 e- 4 e- 5 e- 6 e- 7 e- 8 e-

  20. Gilbert Newton Lewis 1875-1946 • Chemist at UC Berkeley • Exceptional teacher • Productive researcher • “Theory of Chemical Bonding” • Lewis Dot Structures

  21. Lewis Dot Structures • Convenient • Easy way to understand chemical bonding

  22. Dot structures simplify this information Valence Electrons 1 e- 2 e- 3 e- 4 e- 5 e- 6 e- 7 e- 8 e-

  23. Dot structures only use the valence electrons Valence Electrons 1 e- 2 e- 3 e- 4 e- 5 e- 6 e- 7 e- 8 e-

  24. Watch…. H Li Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 1 e- 1 e-

  25. Try this…. Na Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 1 e- 1 e-

  26. Look at Group 2…. Mg Be Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 2 e- 2 e-

  27. Group I3…. B Al ? Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 3 e- 3 e-

  28. Group I4…. C Si Silicon Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 4 e- 4 e-

  29. Group 15…. N P Phosphorous Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 5 e- 5 e-

  30. Group 16…. O S Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 6 e- 6 e-

  31. Group 17…. Cl F Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 7 e- 7 e-

  32. Group 18…. Ne He Valence Electrons Valence Electrons 8 e- 8 e-

  33. Chemical Bonds • Atoms can gain, lose or share electrons. • Forces holding these atoms together are known as chemical bonds

  34. Chemical Bonds • Attraction between 2 or more atoms • Interaction between valence electrons Ionic Bonds Covalent Bonds

  35. Electrons in the highest (outer) level Have most contact with other atoms Known as valence electrons Outer shells of noble gases contain 8 valence electrons (except, He = 2) Valence Electrons Helium Neon Argon

  36. Octet Rule So… Chemical bonds are formed when atoms try to fill their outer electron shell and obey the octet rule.

  37. Attraction between oppositely charged ions Ionic Bonds

  38. Using Lewis Dot Structures

  39. Predicting Ionic Bonds

  40. Salt

  41. Covalent bonds form molecules

  42. Double Covalent bonds

More Related