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Section 6.4 “Metallic Bonding”

Section 6.4 “Metallic Bonding”. Pre-AP Chemistry. Sec 6.4 Vocabulary. metallic bonding malleability ductility. Chapter 6. Section 4 Metallic Bonding. Objectives. Describe the electron-sea model of metallic bonding, and explain why metals are good electrical conductors .

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Section 6.4 “Metallic Bonding”

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  1. Section 6.4“Metallic Bonding” Pre-AP Chemistry

  2. Sec 6.4 Vocabulary • metallic bonding • malleability • ductility

  3. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding Objectives • Describethe electron-sea model of metallic bonding, and explain why metals are good electrical conductors. • Explainwhy metal surfaces are shiny. • Explainwhy metals are malleable and ductile but ionic-crystalline compound are not.

  4. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding Properties of Substances with Metallic, Ionic, and Covalent Bonds

  5. Metallic Bonds are… • How metal atoms are held together in the solid. • Metals hold on to their valence electrons very weakly. • Think of them as positive ions (cations) floating in a sea of mobile electrons

  6. + + + + + + + + + + + + Sea of Electrons • Electrons are free to move through the solid. • Metals conduct electricity.

  7. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding Metallic Bonding • Chemical bonding is different in metals than it is in ionic, molecular, or covalent-network compounds. • The unique characteristics of metallic bonding gives metals their characteristic properties, listed below. • electrical conductivity • Thermal (heat) conductivity • malleability • ductility • shiny appearance (luster)

  8. Why metals are Shiny • metals are strong absorbers and reflectors of light • absorption of light excites metals electrons to higher energy levels • electrons immediately fall emitting energy at same frequency as absorbed (reflection of light)

  9. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding • Malleability is the ability of a substance to be hammered or beaten into thin sheets. • Ductility is the ability of a substance to be drawn, pulled, or extruded through a small opening to produce a wire. • Both malleability and ductility explained in terms of the mobility of the valence electrons (sea of electrons)

  10. Due to the mobility of the valence electrons, metals have: Notice that the ionic crystalbreaks due to ion repulsion! 1) Ductility 2) Malleability and

  11. + + + + + + + + + + + + Malleable Force

  12. + + + + + + + + + + + + Malleable • Mobile electrons allow atoms to slide by, sort of like ball bearings in oil. Force

  13. Metallic properties.. • The valence electrons of metal atoms can be modeled as a sea of mobile electrons. • metals are.. a) good conductors of electric current b) ductile and malleable which explains the mobility of valence e-

  14. + - + - - + - + + - + - - + - + Ionic solids are brittle Force

  15. - + - + - + - + + - + - - + - + Ionic solids are brittle • Strong Repulsionbreaks a crystal apart, due to similar ions being next to each other. Force

  16. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding The Metallic-Bond Model • In a metal, the vacant orbitals in the atoms’ outer energy levels overlap. • This overlapping of orbitals allows the outer electrons of the atoms to roam freely throughout the entire metal. • The electrons are delocalized, which means that they do not belong to any one atom but move freely about the metal’s network of empty atomic orbitals. • These mobile electrons form a sea of electronsaround the metal atoms, which are packed together in a crystal lattice.

  17. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding The Metallic-Bond Model, continued • The chemical bonding that results from the attraction between metal atoms and the surrounding sea of electrons is called metallic bonding.

  18. Chapter 6 Section4 Metallic Bonding Objectives • Describethe electron-sea model of metallic bonding, and explain why metals are good electrical conductors. • Explainwhy metal surfaces are shiny. • Explainwhy metals are malleable and ductile but ionic-crystalline compound are not.

  19. End of Sec 6.4

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