html5-img
1 / 102

Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature

Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature. Chapter 5. What is a Molecule ?. Molecule A collection of atoms bonded together Elemental molecules Atoms from same element Diatomic: H 2 , N 2 , O 2 , F 2 , I 2 , Br 2. What is a Molecule. Molecules of Compounds Atoms of different elements

neith
Télécharger la présentation

Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature

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. Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature Chapter 5

  2. What is a Molecule ? • Molecule • A collection of atoms bonded together • Elemental molecules • Atoms from same element • Diatomic: H2, N2, O2, F2, I2, Br2

  3. What is a Molecule • Molecules of Compounds • Atoms of different elements • Simple vs. Complicated • Small vs. extremely large

  4. Properties of Molecules • Molecules have different properties than their elemental component.

  5. Properties of Molecules

  6. Why do molecules form? • To be like the noble gases • The noble gases are perfect hence they do not react with anything • They have 8 valence electrons in their outer most shell

  7. Valence Electrons? • The outermost electrons. Determines the chemical properties of an element • The only electrons that bond • The roman numerals at the top of each group A element • Most elements prefer to have 8 electrons this is called the octet rule. Why?

  8. The Octet Rule Atoms tend to gain, lose, or share electrons until they have eight valence electrons.

  9. Electron Dot diagrams • A way of keeping track of valence electrons. • How to write them • Write the symbol. • Put one dot for each valence electron • Don’t pair up until you have too. X

  10. The Electron Dot diagram for Nitrogen • Nitrogen has 5 valence electrons. • First we write the symbol. N • Then add 1 electron at a time to each side. • Until they are forced to pair up.

  11. Write the electron dot diagram for • Na • Mg • C • O • F • Al • He

  12. Electron Configurations for Cations • Metals lose electrons to attain noble gas configuration. • They make positive ions.

  13. Electron Dots For Cations • Metals will have few valence electrons Ca

  14. Electron Dots For Cations • Metals will have few valence electrons • These will come off Ca

  15. Electron Dots For Cations • Metals will have few valence electrons • These will come off • Forming positive ions Ca+2

  16. Electron Configurations for Anions • Nonmetals gain electrons to attain noble gas configuration. • They make negative ions.

  17. Electron Dots For Anions • Nonmetals will have many valence .electrons. • They will gain electrons to fill outer shell. P P-3

  18. Stable Electron Configurations • All atoms react to achieve noble gas configuration. • Noble gases 8 valence electrons . • Also called the octet rule. Ar

  19. Covalent Bonding

  20. + + How does H2 form? • The nuclei repel

  21. + + How does H2 form? • The nuclei repel • But they are attracted to electrons • They share the electrons

  22. Covalent bonds • Nonmetals hold onto their valence electrons. • They can’t give away electrons to bond. • Still want noble gas configuration. • Get it by sharing valence electrons with each other. • By sharing both atoms get to count the electrons toward noble gas configuration.

  23. F Covalent bonding • Fluorine has seven valence electrons

  24. F F Covalent bonding • Fluorine has seven valence electrons • A second atom also has seven

  25. F F Covalent bonding • Fluorine has seven valence electrons • A second atom also has seven • By sharing electrons

  26. Single Covalent Bond • A sharing of two valence electrons. • Only nonmetals and Hydrogen.

  27. How to show how they formed • It’s like a jigsaw puzzle. • I have to tell you what the final formula is. • You put the pieces together to end up with the right formula. • For example- show how water is formed with covalent bonds.

  28. H O Water Each hydrogen has 1 valence electron Each hydrogen wants 1 more The oxygen has 6 valence electrons The oxygen wants 2 more They share to make each other happy

  29. O Water • Put the pieces together • The first hydrogen is happy • The oxygen still wants one more H

  30. O Water • The second hydrogen attaches • Every atom has full energy levels H H

  31. Multiple Bonds • Sometimes atoms share more than one pair of valence electrons. • A double bond is when atoms share two pair (4) of electrons. • A triple bond is when atoms share three pair (6) of electrons.

  32. O Carbon dioxide • CO2- Carbon is central atom( I have to tell you) • Carbon has 4 valence electrons • Wants 4 more • Oxygen has 6 valence electrons • Wants 2 more C

  33. O Carbon dioxide • Attaching 1 oxygen leaves the oxygen 1 short and the carbon 3 short C

  34. O O Carbon dioxide • Attaching the second oxygen leaves both oxygen 1 short and the carbon 2 short C

  35. O O Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more C

  36. O O Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more C

  37. O Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more O C

  38. O Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more O C

  39. O Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more O C

  40. Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more O C O

  41. Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more • Requires two double bonds • Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond O C O

  42. Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more • Requires two double bonds • Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond 8 valence electrons O C O

  43. Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more • Requires two double bonds • Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond 8 valence electrons O C O

  44. Carbon dioxide • The only solution is to share more • Requires two double bonds • Each atom gets to count all the atoms in the bond 8 valence electrons O C O

  45. F F F S F F F F B F F H O H N O Very unstable!! A. Octet Rule • Exceptions: • Hydrogen  2 valence e- • Groups 1,2,3 get 2,4,6 valence e- • Expanded octet  more than 8 valence e- (e.g. S, P, Xe) • Radicals  odd # of valence e-

  46. B. Drawing Lewis Diagrams • Find total # of valence e-. • Arrange atoms - singular atom is usually in the middle. • Form bonds between atoms (2 e-). • Distribute remaining e- to give each atom an octet (recall exceptions). • If there aren’t enough e- to go around, form double or triple bonds.

  47. B. Drawing Lewis Diagrams • CF4 1 C × 4e- = 4e- 4 F × 7e- = 28e- 32e- F F C F F - 8e- 24e-

  48. B. Drawing Lewis Diagrams • BeCl2 1 Be × 2e- = 2e- 2 Cl × 7e- = 14e- 16e- ClBeCl - 4e- 12e-

  49. B. Drawing Lewis Diagrams • CO2 1 C × 4e- = 4e- 2 O × 6e- = 12e- 16e- OCO - 4e- 12e-

  50. C. Polyatomic Ions • To find total # of valence e-: • Add 1e- for each negative charge. • Subtract 1e- for each positive charge. • Place brackets around the ion and label the charge.

More Related