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Stability and Ionic Bonding. Section 20.1 & 20.2. SC Standards Covered. Standard PS-4.1 Explain the role of bonding in achieving chemical stability. Standard PS-2.5
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Stability and Ionic Bonding Section 20.1 & 20.2
SC Standards Covered • Standard PS-4.1 • Explain the role of bonding in achieving chemical stability. • Standard PS-2.5 • Predict the charge that a representative element will acquire according to the arrangement of electrons in its outer energy level. • Standard PS-4.6 • Predict the ratio by which the representative elements combine to form binary ionic compounds, and represent that ratio in a chemical formula. • Standard PS-4.4 • Classify compounds as crystalline (containing ionic bonds) or molecular (containing covalent bonds) based on whether their outer electrons are transferred or shared.
Combined Elements • Most elements are not found by themselves in nature • Usually they are found combined with other elements • Two or more elements chemically combined is called a compound • The properties of a compound are very different from the properties of the elements that make up the compound
Chemical Formulas • Chemical formula – tells what elements and how many of each element are in a unit of that compound • H2O – water; contains two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen • NH3 – ammonia; contains one atom of nitrogen and 3 atoms of hydrogen H H O N H H H
Mg(OH)2 – milk of magnesia – contains one atom of magnesium, two atoms of oxygen, and two atoms of hydrogen Mg O O H H
Atomic Stability Why do Elements Form Compounds? - the noble gases are extremely stable atoms that do not combine with other elements. - it is the eight valence electrons that make the noble gas atoms stable
An atom is chemically stable when its outermost energy level is complete • 1st level – 2 electrons • All other levels – 8 electrons • All elements combine with other elements by losing, gaining or sharing electrons so that they will have eight valence electrons!!
- When atoms begin to lose, share, or gain electrons they begin to get attracted to other atoms and form chemical bonds - a force that holds atoms together in a substance. x5
Ionic Bonding • Atoms that gain or lose electrons become charged forming an ion. What ion will Sodium form? Since sodium has 1 valence electron it can lose that electron and then have eight valence elect. 1 e- 8 e- 11 p+ 12no 2 e-
This will give the sodium atom a +1 charge • 11p+ + 10e- = +1Na+1 Superscript – written above line; gives the charge of ion Group 1 → 1 valence e- → +1 Group 2 → 2 valence e- → +2 Group 13 → 3 valence e- → +3
What ion will fluorine form? 7e- Fluorine needs to gain 1e- in order to become stable 2e- 9p+ 10n0 - This will give fluorine a -1 charge F-1 Group 17 → 7 valence e-→ -1 Group 16 → 6 valence e- → -2 Group 15 → 5 valence e- → -3 x6
Using electron dot structure to show ionic bonds Explain the formation of the ionic bond between sodium and chlorine Na Cl Na+[ Cl ]-1 NaCl Electron dot struct. Formula unit
Steps to draw electron dot structures for ionic compounds • Draw the electron dot structures of the elements • transfer electrons from the metal to the nonmetal • add elements as needed • continue transferring until all atoms are stable
5. Write out the chemical formula using subscripts to show how many of each element it took
Lets try aluminum and oxygen!! Al O 2 Al+3 [ O ]-2 3 O Al Al2O3 O
Your Turn!! Use electron dot structures to write chemical formulas for the following combination of elements: • potassium and fluorine • Magnesium and fluorine • Aluminum and nitrogen • Magnesium and phosphorous