1 / 29

Molecular Compounds

Molecular Compounds. Bonding Review - Compounds. Which statement(s) is(are) true about compounds? A) They have to contain at least 2 different kinds of elements (like Na, S) B) The combination is of a specific ratio of atoms. (as in Na 2 S)

Download Presentation

Molecular Compounds

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. Molecular Compounds

  2. Bonding Review - Compounds • Which statement(s) is(are) true about compounds? A) They have to contain at least 2 different kinds of elements (like Na, S) B) The combination is of a specific ratio of atoms. (as in Na2S) C) The combination of atoms in a compound can be predicted knowing # of valence electrons.(Na has 1, S has 6)

  3. Answer • All 3 are correct. • A compound is composed of 2 or more elements bonded together in a certain ratio. • The ratio IS able to be figured out knowing how many valence electrons each type of atom has.

  4. Element types and bonding MgCl2 - Mg is a metal, Cl is a non-metal (ionic) SO2 - S and O are both nonmetals, molecular compound (using covalent bonds to hold atoms together).

  5. Practice • A) LiBr • B) SBr2 • C) Li2SO4 • A) ionic • B) molecular • C) ionic (polyatomic SO4 is an ion silly)

  6. Molecular Compounds • Substances consisting of atoms that are covalently bonded • Covalent bonds • Made through electron sharing among atoms • Electrons are not transferred • Sharing allows substance to achieve stability (Noble gas configuration) • Sharing forms molecules

  7. Molecules • Are held together by the attraction of electrons of one atom and the nucleus of a second atom • A single bond forms from a single pair of shared electrons • Two pairs of electrons form a double bond • Paired electrons have opposite spins and occupy less space than a pair of electrons surrounding only one atom • Their bonds are flexible, somewhat like springs

  8. Ionic compounds Covalent compounds

  9. Covalent Compound Properties • Lower melting and boiling points vs. ionic • Molecules have no charge, hence do not conduct heat or electricity in any state. • Melting molecular compounds • Does NOT separate the clusters of atoms within a molecule, • Separates just molecules from each other

  10. Naming Binary Molecular Compounds • Molecular compound names include prefixes that indicate the number of atoms in the molecule • They are composed of nonmetal elements

  11. To name molecular compounds: • Write the name of the least electronegative element with a prefix to indicate the number of atoms of the element that are present • Write the name of the most electronegative element second with a prefix to indicate the number of atoms of the element that are present • Suffix –ide is added to the name of the last element

  12. More rules . . . • The prefix mono- is NOT written with the first word of a compound’s name • Some prefixes are sometimes shortened to make a name easier to say

  13. Examples H2O is dihydrogen monoxide NH3 N2H4 phosphorus pentachloride nitrogen monoxide carbon tetrachloride

  14. What is an Acid? • An acid is a molecular substance that dissolves in water to produce hydrogen ions • They are molecular compounds that separate into a cation and an anion in water (ionic tendency)

  15. Naming Acids • Binary acids: • The name begins with the prefix hydro- • The name is derived from the anion • The suffix –ide should be changed to –ic • Polyatomic acids: • Do not use prefix hydro- • The suffix –ate should be changed to –ic • The suffix –ite should be changed to –ous

  16. Examples • H2Se is hydroselenic acid • HCl • HNO3 • H2SO4 • nitric acid • phosphoric acid • oxalic acid • hydroiodic acid

  17. What are Lewis Dot Structures? • Use the chemical symbol to represent the nucleus and inner energy levels • Uses dots to represent valence electrons • Types of bonds: • single bonds share 1 pair of electrons (also known as sigma) • double bonds share 2 pairs of electrons (also known as pi) • triple bonds share 3 pairs of electrons (one sigma and two pi bonds)

  18. Rules for Drawing Lewis Dot Structures • See handout

  19. Molecular Shapes • VSEPR: Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion theory– system for predicting molecular shape based on the idea that pairs of electrons orient themselves as far apart as possible • Can only really be used with simple molecules

  20. Terms • Structural formula: indicates the spatial arrangement of atoms and bonds within a molecule • Ligand: an atom attached to the central atom • Unshared pairs: pairs of electrons that are not involved in covalent bonding, but instead belong exclusively to central atom

  21. Linear Bent Trigonal pyramidal Trigonal Planar

  22. T-shaped Tetrahedral see-saw Square planar

  23. Trigonal bipyramidal Square pyramidal Octahedral http://chemlab.truman.edu/CHEM121Labs/MolecularModeling1.htm

  24. Polarity • Electrons are not always shared equally in molecules • Creates a partial charge within the molecule • Atoms with uneven electronegativities share electrons unequally • The greater the difference, the greater the polarity • Polar – “having opposite ends”; one atom attracts electrons more strongly than the others • Nonpolar – doesn’t have opposite ends; electrons shared equally among bonding atoms

  25. Examples CO2: Is a symmetrical molecule; therefore it is nonpolar H2O: H = 2.20, O = 3.44 3.44 – 2.20 = 1.24 Water molecules are asymmetrical, so the molecule is polar covalent, with the electrons concentrating around the O atom (higher electronegativity)

  26. Differences in Electronegativity

  27. Diatomic Molecules • A diatomic molecule is a molecule formed from two identical atoms • The atoms join together because they are more stable that way than if they exist as single atoms • Remember HOFBrINCl • H2, O2, F2, Br2, I2, N2, and Cl2

More Related