1 / 18

Chemical Bonding

Chemical Bonding. Chemical Bond. The attraction between atoms that holds them together and makes them function as a unit. Ionic Bonds. Ionic Bonds. An ionic bond is a transfer of electrons between a metal and a nonmetal. Electrons are completely transferred from one atom to another.

Download Presentation

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. Chemical Bonding

  2. Chemical Bond • The attraction between atoms that holds them together and makes them function as a unit.

  3. Ionic Bonds

  4. Ionic Bonds • An ionic bond is a transfer of electrons between a metal and a nonmetal. • Electrons are completely transferred from one atom to another. • They either lose or gain electrons and form ions. • The atoms are bound together by the attraction between the opposite charges.

  5. Types of Ions • The metal donates electrons and becomes positively charged-cation • The non metal gains electrons and becomes negatively charged-anion • Example

  6. Writing Formulas 1. Write the symbols of each element. 2. Put their charge in their upper right corner. 3. Crisscross the numbers down (Not the charges). Example: Write the formula for Magnesium Chloride. Mg Cl Mg+2 Cl-1 Mg Cl

  7. Writing Formulas Practice Write the formula for: • Aluminum Bromide • Calcium Oxide • Calcium Nitride • Sodium Chloride • Al Br • 2. Ca O • 3. Ca N • 4. Na Cl

  8. Covalent Bonds

  9. Covalent Bonds • A covalent bond is the sharing of electrons between 2 nonmetals. • example • Both of the nonmetals want to gain electrons so they will share electrons to fill their orbitals. **A complete outer orbital has 8 electrons.**

  10. Types of Covalent Bonds • Non-polar: an electron is shared equally between the atoms. • Electronegativity difference: 0-0.3 • Ex: H2 • Polar: an electron is more attracted to one atom than to another. • Electronegativity difference: 0.3-1.7 • Ex: HCl

  11. Electronegativity differences Non-polar bond: Ex: H2 2.1-2.1=0 Polar Bond: Ex: HCl 3.0-2.1=0.9

  12. Lewis Dot for Covalent Bonds H2O • Can also be used to show bonding between atoms. • Electrons are placed between the atoms and are represented by a pair of dots or a dash. • Each dash represents one pair of electrons, or one bond. The structural formula shows a shared pair of electrons by a dashed line.

  13. Drawing Covalent Bonds • Example: CH4 • Example: NH3

  14. Multiple Bonds • A single covalent bond is formed for every pair of electrons shared between two atoms. • Some atoms can share multiple pairs of electrons, forming multiple covalent bonds.  • Single bond- 1 pair of electrons • Double bond- 2 pair of electrons • Triple bond- 3 pair of electrons • example

  15. Multiple Covalent Bonds Examples: • Oxygen has six valence electrons, so it needs two electrons to complete its octet.  When two oxygen atoms bond, they share two pairs of electrons, forming two covalent bonds. 

  16. Extras • Diatomic molecule- is a molecule containing 2 identical atoms. • Examples: H2 N2 O2 F2 Cl2 Br2 I2 • Chemical Formula- represents the # of atoms of each element in a compound by using symbols and subscripts. • Example: H2O H=2 O=1 • Bonding Animation

  17. Cartoon courtesy of NearingZero.net

More Related