1 / 14

chapter 12 chemical bonding

chapter 12 chemical bonding. Essentially everything we see around us, natural or man-made, compounds or elements, has atoms bonded with atoms Hard or soft, solid, liquid, or gas; these properties are determined by bonding Their structures play the major role in chemical rxns all around us

mayda
Download Presentation

chapter 12 chemical 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. chapter 12chemical bonding

  2. Essentially everything we see around us, natural or man-made, compounds or elements, has atoms bonded with atoms • Hard or soft, solid, liquid, or gas; these properties are determined by bonding • Their structures play the major role in chemical rxns all around us • The way they’re bonded determines structure

  3. 12.1 types of chemical bonds • Bond: a force that holds groups of two or more atoms together and causes them to function as a unit • They can do this in several ways!

  4. These substances are called ionic compounds • Ionic bonds involve the gain, loss or exchange of electrons • They generally form between metals and nonmetals, why?

  5. Nonmetals, with their higher electronegativity, are able to strip electrons from metals (metals have lower ionization energies) • Ionic bonds are strong

  6. metals form ions by losing electrons • nonmetals gain electrons • there can also be a transfer of electrons • and the result is two things that are of opposite charge and therefore attracted to each other

  7. When the atoms are reconfigured into ionically bonded substances, they are more stable and energy is released

  8. Consider table salt (NaCl) • When the water in salt water evaporates away, the Na+ get together with the Cl- to form NaCl • This closely packed collection of oppositely charged ions is an example of Ionic bonding

  9. Covalent Bonds What if the atoms are both nonmetals with similar electro-negativity? • When these two particles get close, the e- of one are attracted to the p+ of the other; the e- (or p +) of one are repelled by the e- (or p +) of the other

  10. Covalent Bonds • If they are most stable at a distance where their e- shells overlap, a bond may form

  11. Covalent Bonds • This is a covalent bond because outer shell (valence) electrons are shared by both atoms

  12. Ionic/ covalent bond comparison

  13. Questions?

More Related