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Chemical Bonding. Ch. 8. IONIC. Atoms in ionic compounds transfer electrons when they bond and become charged. This occurs when nonmetals bond with metals. COVALENT. Covalent bonds – atoms held together by sharing electrons.
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Chemical Bonding Ch. 8
IONIC • Atoms in ionic compounds transfer electrons when they bond and become charged. • This occurs when nonmetals bond with metals.
COVALENT • Covalent bonds – atoms held together by sharing electrons. • Bonding allows atoms to fill their energy level and become more stable. • Sharing electrons form covalent bonds and occurs when nonmetals bond with nonmetals. Each bond shares 2 electrons.
Atoms share electrons in covalent bonds to attain a noble-gas electron configuration. • Valence electrons are electrons located on the outer energy level. We can represent the valence electrons with dots. • Atoms usually acquire a total of 8 electrons in the outer level. This is called the octet rule. • H and He, need 2 electrons to fill their valence. • All other elements need 8 electrons to fill their valence.
For a noble gas, the outermost energy level for the electrons is filled. • In forming the molecule HF, the F atom attains the electron configuration of Ne.
Molecule – atoms joined together by covalent bonds • Atoms in molecules share electrons when they bond.
NH3 is a covalent molecule. • Diatomic molecule – consists of 2 atoms • Br.I.N.Cl.H.O.F. • Chlorine (Cl) exists as a diatomic molecule • The diatomic molecule F2 contains a single covalent bond.
Electron Dots and Bonding • Lewis structures use electron-dot diagrams to show how electrons are arranged in atoms. • Electrons are represented by dots. • A pair of electrons may be represented by 2 dots or a dash. • The electron dot structure for H2 is H:H or H―H
The pairs of valence electrons that do not participate in bonding in diatomic oxygen molecules are called unshared pairs.
Use NASB to draw dot diagrams. • N – electrons needed to fill valence (8 or 2) • A- electrons available in atom • S – electrons shared = N – A • B – formed bonds (S 2)
In Cl2, the total number of unshared pairs of electrons is 6. • Cl + Cl Cl―Cl or Cl:Cl • The diatomic molecule N2 contains a triple covalent bond. • N + N N≡N or N⋮⋮N • In the N2 molecule, there is only one unshared pair of electrons in each nitrogen atom.
The HI molecule contains only one single covalent bond. • H• + I H―I or H:I • There are 4 single covalent bonds in a molecule of CH4. H H • C + 4H• H:C: H or H C H H H • There are 2 double covalent bonds in a molecule of CO2. • C 2 O O═C═O or O::C::O • Carbon monoxide has a triple covalent bond. C O C≡O OR C⋮⋮O
Bonding Theories • According to VSEPR theory, molecules adjust their shapes to keep pairs of valence electrons as far apart as possible. • VSEPR – • Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion • A stereoactive set is a shared pair or an unshared pair of electrons around the central atom.
According to VSEPR theory repulsive forces between unshared pairs of electrons causes water molecules to have their shape.
Bond angle = 109.5 degrees Example: CH4 Bond angle = 106.5 degrees Example: NH3
Bond angle = 104.5 degrees Example: H2O Bond angle = 120 degrees Example: CO32-
Bond angle = 118.6 degrees Example: O3 Bond angle = 180 degrees Example: CO2
Polar Bonds • In a polar covalent bond, electrons are shared unequally. Some atoms (elements) are more electronegative and attract electrons more. They will gain a slightly negative charge. • The electronegativity difference determines the type of bond.
HF contains a polar covalent bond. • F forms a more polar bond with H than Cl, Br, or I. • An ionic bond would be expected in a molecule of LiF.
Intermolecular forces – forces between 2 molecules • Van der Waals forces - 2 weakest attractions between molecules • Dipoleinteractions – polar molecules attracted to one another • Dispersion forces – caused by the motion of electrons
Hydrogen bonds – strongest intermolecular forces • Hydrogen covalently bonded to a very electronegative atom is also bonded to an unshared electron pair of another electronegative atom. • H2O is a polar molecule. • 2 H• + O :O:H • H
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