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Molecules and Ions. Image courtesy of www.lab-initio.com. Molecules. Two or more atoms of the same or different elements, covalently bonded together. Molecules are discrete structures, and their formulas represent each atom present in the molecule. Pentane, C 5 H 12.
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Molecules and Ions Image courtesy of www.lab-initio.com
Molecules Two or more atoms of the same or different elements, covalently bonded together. Molecules are discrete structures, and their formulas represent each atom present in the molecule. Pentane, C5H12
Covalent Network Substances Covalent network substances have covalently bonded atoms, but do not have discrete formulas. Why Not?? Graphene – carbon allotrope
Ions • Cation: A positive ion • Mg2+, NH4+ • Anion: A negative ion • Cl-, SO42- • Ionic Bonding: Force of attraction between oppositely charged ions. • Ionic compounds form crystals, so their formulas are written empirically (lowest whole number ratio of ions).
Predicting Ionic Charges Group 1: Lose 1 electron to form 1+ ions H+ Li+ Na+ K+ Rb+ Cs+
Predicting Ionic Charges Group 2: Loses 2 electrons to form 2+ ions Be2+ Mg2+ Ca2+ Ba2+ Sr2+
Predicting Ionic Charges Group 13: Loses 3 electrons to form 3+ ions B3+ Al3+ Ga3+
Predicting Ionic Charges Group 14: Loses 4 electrons or gains 4 electrons Caution! C22- and C4- are both called carbide
Predicting Ionic Charges Nitride N3- Group 15: Gains 3 electrons to form 3- ions Phosphide P3- As3- Arsenide
Predicting Ionic Charges Oxide O2- Group 16: Gains 2 electrons to form 2- ions S2- Sulfide Se2- Selenide
Predicting Ionic Charges Group 17: Gains 1 electron to form 1- ions F1- Fluoride Cl1- Chloride Br1- Bromide I1- Iodide
Predicting Ionic Charges Group 18: Stable Noble gases do not form ions!
Predicting Ionic Charges Groups 3 - 12: Many transition metals have more than one possible oxidation state. Iron(II) = Fe2+ Iron(III) = Fe3+
Predicting Ionic Charges Groups 3 - 12: Some transition metals have only one possible oxidation state. Zinc =Zn2+ Silver = Ag+
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example: Barium nitrate 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. 3. Balance charges , if necessary, using subscripts.Use parentheses if you need more than one of apolyatomic ion. Ba2+ ( ) NO3- 2 Not balanced
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example:Ammonium sulfate 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. 3. Balance charges , if necessary, using subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than one of a polyatomic ion. ( ) NH4+ SO42- 2 Not balanced
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example: Iron(III) chloride 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. 3. Balance charges , if necessary, using subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than one of a polyatomic ion. Fe3+ Cl- 3 Not balanced
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example: Aluminum sulfide 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. 3. Balance charges , if necessary, using subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than one of a polyatomic ion. Al3+ S2- 2 3 Not balanced
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example: Magnesium carbonate 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. Mg2+ CO32- They arebalanced
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example: Zinc hydroxide 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. 3. Balance charges , if necessary, using subscripts. Use parentheses if you need more than one of a polyatomic ion. ( ) Zn2+ OH- 2 Not balanced
Writing Ionic Compound Formulas Example: Aluminum phosphate 1. Write the formulas for the cation and anion, including CHARGES! 2. Check to see if charges are balanced. Al3+ PO43- They AREbalanced
Naming Ionic Compounds • Cationfirst, then anion • Monatomic cation = name of the element • Ca2+ = calcium ion • Monatomic anion=root + -ide • Cl-=chloride • CaCl2 = calcium chloride
Naming Ionic Compounds Metals with multiple oxidation states • some metal forms more than one cation • use Roman numeral in name • PbCl2 • Pb2+ is cation • PbCl2 = lead(II) chloride
Binary Molecular Compounds • Compounds between two nonmetals • First element in the formula is named first. • Keeps its element name • Gets a prefix if there is a subscript on it • Second element is named second • Use the root of the element name plus the -idesuffix • Always use a prefix on the second element
List of Prefixes • 1 = mon(o) • 2 = di • 3 = tri • 4 = tetra • 5 = penta • 6 = hexa • 7 = hepta • 8 = octa • 9 = nona • 10 = deka
Naming Binary Compounds P2O5= diphosphoruspentoxide CO2 = carbon dioxide CO = carbon monoxide N2O = dinitrogenmonoxide
Practice – Write the Formula Check next slide for answers
Practice – Name the Compounds Check next slide for answers