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Covalent Bonds

Covalent Bonds. Types of bonds. Ionic bonding results from electrostatic attractions among ions, which are formed by the transfer of one or more electrons from one atom to another. Covalent bonding results from sharing one or more electron pairs between two atoms.

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Covalent Bonds

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  1. Covalent Bonds

  2. Types of bonds • Ionic bonding results from electrostatic attractions among ions, which are formed by the transfer of one or more electrons from one atom to another. • Covalent bonding results from sharing one or more electron pairs between two atoms. • Metallic bonding results in a sea of electrons between two cations • http://www.picsearch.com/info.cgi?q=ionic%20bonds&id=IHgxbdtO5lawBR9zy6jqpq1E_2Jt6okckgQmu4NAeQI

  3. What makes a covalent bond? • Covalent bonds are formed when atoms share electrons. • Two nonmetals • If the atoms share 2 electrons a single covalent bond is formed. • If the atoms share 4 electrons a double covalent bond is formed. • If the atoms share 6 electrons a triple covalent bond is formed.

  4. Properties • Lower melting and boiling points • Molecules don’t interact much • Gases or liquids at room temp • Don’t conduct electricity • No ions so no charges • Flexible • Molecules move around

  5. Naming covalent compounds • Two elements • Use prefixes to tell how many atoms of each element are present • Example: Carbon Dioxide CO2 Mono is never used for the first element

  6. Prefixes

  7. Writing formulas • The prefixes simply tell you the subscript for each element • Example: dinitrogentetroxide N2O4 Mono (1 is not written) Drop the vowel ending of the prefix if the prefix ends in a vowel and the element begins with a vowel.

  8. Covalent bonding

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