1 / 33

Ch. 6 & 7 - Covalent Bonding

Ch. 6 & 7 - Covalent Bonding. Molecular or Covalent Compounds (p. 164 – 17 5 , 211 – 213) Sharing Valence Electrons Nonmetals Only. Molecules. Oxygen molecule, O 2. Water molecule H 2 O. Sucrose molecule, C 12 H 22 O 11. Molecular Nomenclature. Prefix System (binary compounds)

kiri
Download Presentation

Ch. 6 & 7 - Covalent Bonding

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. Ch. 6 & 7 - Covalent Bonding • Molecular or Covalent Compounds(p. 164 – 175, 211 – 213) • Sharing Valence Electrons • Nonmetals Only

  2. Molecules Oxygen molecule, O2 Water molecule H2O Sucrose molecule, C12H22O11

  3. Molecular Nomenclature • Prefix System (binary compounds) 1. Less e-neg atom comes first. 2. Add prefixes to indicate # of atoms. Omit mono- prefix on first element. 3. Change the ending of the second element to -ide.

  4. PREFIX mono- di- tri- tetra- penta- hexa- hepta- octa- nona- deca- NUMBER 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Molecular Nomenclature

  5. Name These • N2O • NO2 • Cl2O7 • CBr4 • CO2 • BaCl2

  6. Write formulas for these • diphosphorus pentoxide • tetraiodine nonoxide • sulfur hexaflouride • nitrogen trioxide • Carbon tetrahydride • phosphorus trifluoride • aluminum chloride • h.w. p. 235 # 10,11

  7. The Terminology • The smallest entity of a covalent compound is called a ___________. • A bond is formed when one pair of electrons is shared. • Some elements,( nitrogen, carbon, and oxygen) can share more than one pair of electrons and form bonds.

  8. The Terminology • A bond is produced when two pairs of electrons are shared. • A bond is produced when three pairs of electrons are shared. • Covalent bonding can also occur between two atoms of the same nonmetal. This forms a molecule.

  9. Diatomic Elements • There are seven diatomic elements: H2 N2 O2 F2 Cl2 Br2 I2 H N O F Cl Br I

  10. Ne Lewis Structures • Octet Rule • Most atoms form bonds in order to obtain 8 valence e- • Full energy level stability ~ Noble Gases

  11. Lewis Structures • Electron dot notations that represent compounds. • Pairs of dots represent shared electrons between bonded atoms • And unshared pairs or lone pairs that belong exclusively to one atom

  12. Drawing Lewis Structures • Determine the type and number of atoms in the molecule. • Write the electron dot notation for each atom. • Determine the total number of valence electrons in the atoms

  13. Drawing Lewis Structures • Arrange the atoms to form a skeleton structure for the molecule. If carbon is present, it is central - otherwise the least electronegative element is central. (hydrogen is never central) Then connect the atoms by electron pair bonds.

  14. Drawing Lewis Structures • Add lone pairs so that hydrogen has a duet and each other nonmetal has an octet • Count the electrons to be sure that the number of valence electrons used is equal to the number available.

  15. Drawing Lewis Structuressingle bonds • CF4 1 C × 4e- = 4e- 4 F × 7e- = 28e- 32e- F F C F F Each wants an octet: 1 C × 8e- = 8e- 4 F × 8e- = 32e- 40e- -32e- must share 8e-

  16. Practice Single Bonds • CH3I • H2 • F2 • H2O • HCl • NH3 • H2S • CH4 H.W. p. 197 # 39

  17. Drawing Lewis Structuresmultiple bonds • Multiple bonds between nitrogen, carbon, and oxygen are possible

  18. Drawing Lewis Diagramsmultiple bonds • CO2 1 C × 4e- = 4e- 2 O × 6e- = 12e- 16e- OCO Each wants an octet: 1 C × 8e- = 8e- 2 O × 8e- = 16e- 24e- -16e- must share 8e-

  19. Practice Multiple Bonds • C2H2 • CH2O • HCN • CH4 • CCl4 h.w. p. 197 #41

  20. Polyatomic Ions ( are held together by covalent bonds) • 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.

  21. Polyatomic Ions • ClO4- 1 Cl × 7e- = 7e- 4 O × 6e- = 24e- 31e O O Cl O O + 1e- 32e- Each wants an octet: 1 Cl × 8e- = 8e- 4 O × 8e- = 32e- 40e- -32e- must share 8e-

  22. Polyatomic Ions • NH4+ 1 N × 5e- = 5e- 4 H × 1e- = 4e- 9e- H H N H H - 1e- 8e- 4 H × 2e- = 8e- 1 N × 8e- = 8e- 16e- - 8e- must share 8e-

  23. Practice Polyatomic Ions • Phosphate • Sulfate • Nitrate • Chlorate • Chlorite • Hypochlorite h.w. p. 197 #42

  24. Resonance Structures • Molecules that can’t be correctly represented by a single Lewis diagram. • Actual structure is an average of all the possibilities. • Show possible structures separated by a double-headed arrow.

  25. Acids • Acids • Compounds that form H+ in water. • Formulas usually begin with ‘H’. • Examples: • HCl – hydrochloric acid • HNO3 – nitric acid • H2SO4 – sulfuric acid

  26. Naming Binary acids • Includes hydrogen and another nonmetal • use the prefix hydro- and change -ide to -ic acid • HCl - hydrogen ion and chloride ion • hydrochloric acid • H2S hydrogen ion and sulfide ion • hydrosulfuric acid

  27. Naming Oxyacids • Includes hydrogen and a polyatomic ion containing oxygen • Do not include hydro- in the name. • If the polyatomic ion ends in -ate, change it to -ic acid • HNO3 - Hydrogen and nitrate ions • Nitric acid • If the polyatomic ion ends in -ite, change it to -ous acid • HNO2 Hydrogen and nitrite ions • Nitrous acid

  28. Acid Nomenclature binary acids oxyacids

  29. Name these acids • HF • H3P • H2SO4 • H2SO3 • HCN • H2CrO4

  30. Writing Formulas Binary Acids • hydro- nonmetal root-ic acid • Will include hydrogen and a nonmetal • Criss-cross to make the charges cancel out. (the charge on the other element becomes the subscript for hydrogen) • Ex. Hydrochloric acid • Hydrogen and chloride HCl

  31. Writing Formulas Oxyacids • If acid end in –ic, then polyatomic ion ends in –ate. • If acid end in –ous, then polyatomic ion ends in –ite. • Criss-cross to make the charges cancel out. (the charge on the polyatomic ion becomes the subscript for hydrogen) • Ex. Iodic acid • hydrogen and iodate HIO3

  32. Write formulas for these • hydrobromic acid • hydrofluoric acid • phosphoric acid • bromic acid • Hypochlorous acid • hydroiodic acid • acetic acid • carbonic acid • phosphorous acid • Oxalic acid h.w. p. 235 #14,15

  33. Bell Ringer p. 235 # 12

More Related