1 / 17

Valence Electrons and Lewis Dot Structures

Valence Electrons and Lewis Dot Structures. We always have so much to do!. What is a Valence Electron?. Valence Electron : electron in the outermost energy level of an atom. Are they more important than the rest?? They’re the ones doing most of the movement during a chemical reaction.

Download Presentation

Valence Electrons and Lewis Dot Structures

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. Valence Electrons and Lewis Dot Structures We always have so much to do!

  2. What is a Valence Electron? • Valence Electron: electron in the outermost energy level of an atom. • Are they more important than the rest?? • They’re the ones doing most of the movement during a chemical reaction. • So we’re going to need to know how many there are in an atom!

  3. Finding Valence Electrons with the Periodic Table • It’s super easy! You’ll like it! • (For everything but Transition Metals in the Middle) • First step: find the element on the periodic table. • Second step: find the group number on the top of that column. (ignore the 1 in Groups 13-18) • Ta-Da! That’s it!

  4. Yay Practice! • Find the # of valence electrons for: • Li • P • I • Ar • Ca • O = 1 = 5 = 7 = 8 = 2 = 6

  5. What Atoms Like • Octet Rule: most atoms want to be surrounded by 8 valence electrons or 0 valence electrons. (It’s all or nothing)

  6. Now For Lewis Dot Structures! • Easy, easy stuff! • Step 1: Write the symbol for the element. • Step 2: Put ‘dots’ around the symbol to represent valence electrons. • 1 dot = 1 electron • Ta-Da! That’s it!

  7. “C” It In Action! • Let’s do Carbon. Carbon=C • Carbon is in Group 4 • = 4 valance electrons • Put one on each side!

  8. Rules for filling in Dots • Maximum 2 dots per side (4 sides = 8 dots) • It does not matter which side you start on. • You have to fill in each side with one dot before you double up… • Example: Sulfur has how many valence e-? 6 How many dots does it get? 6 S

  9. You do some! • Draw the Lewis Dot Structures for the following atoms: • Oxygen • Sodium • Fluorine • Nitrogen • Beryllium

  10. Check It! O 1. Na 2. 3. F 4. 5. Be N

  11. Now What Do I Do With That? • We can use number of valence electrons to predict which charge they have when we turn them into an ion. • What’s an ion?? • An atom that has gained or lost electrons. • Octet Rule: most atoms want to be surrounded by 8 valence electrons or 0 valence electrons. (It’s all or nothing)

  12. How So? • For atoms with LESS than 4 valence electrons, they’re going to lose or give up electrons to form positive cations. • For atoms with MORE than 4 valence electrons, they’re going to gain or steal electrons to form negative anions. • For atoms with 4 valance electrons, it can go either way. • For atoms with 8 valance electrons, there is no change.

  13. Why??? protons electrons

  14. Example • I need to know what ion Aluminum forms. • I know that it has ____ valence electrons. • Is 3 closer to 0 or 8? • So will it gain or lose electrons? • How many will it lose to be 0? • If it loses electrons, will it be + or -? • So I end up with… Al+3 3 Closer to 0 Lose All 3 +

  15. Remember This Chart!

  16. More Practice! • Bet you knew that was coming, too, huh? • Predict the ion formed by the following elements: Write the symbol with the charge. • Cl • B • K • Ca • O • Ne

  17. Check It! • Cl = Cl-1 • B = B+3 • K = K+1 • Ca = Ca+2 • O = O-2 • Ne = Ne or Ne0 (no change)

More Related