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IONIC BONDING. The Metal – Nonmetal Bond. Lewis Dot Structures. A famous chemist named Lewis invented a symbol to show valence electrons. He used a dot next to the symbol to represent each valence electron. The dots are spread around the 4 sides. Each pair of dots Represents a bond.
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IONIC BONDING The Metal – Nonmetal Bond
Lewis Dot Structures • A famous chemist named Lewis invented a symbol to show valence electrons. He used a dot next to the symbol to represent each valence electron. The dots are spread around the 4 sides. • Each pair of dots Represents a bond.
When a metal and nonmetal come together, a pair of electrons acts as a bond. They each become ions.
The Rules: • Metal first, nonmetal second • Nonmetal ion becomes ‘ide’ • Metal is positive, nonmetal is negative • Charges must balance to zero • Formula uses a subscript to balance charges • Example: MgCl2 ; Na2O; NaCl
The sodium atom and chloride atom bond together as ions and form a new compound.
Solutions • When ionic compounds are put in water, they dissolve into ions:
Examples: OH-1 = hydroxide NO3-1 = nitrate PO4-3 = phosphate SO4-2 = sulfate *They behave just like single atom ions. Polyatomic ions: are groups of atoms bonded together with a charge hence the name “poly” “atomic” “ions”.
Practice: Use polyatomic ions just like any other ion; But when you have more than one , use parentheses. • barium hydroxide= • Notice parentheses show multiple ions.
barium hydroxide= Ba OH +2 -1 Ba(OH)2 +2 -1(2) = 0
strontium nitrate = Sr NO3 +2 -1 strontium nitrate = Sr(NO3)2 +2 + -1(2)
lithium phosphate = Li PO4 +1 -3 lithium phosphate Li3PO4 +1(3) + -3 = 0
potassium sulfate = KSO4 +1 -2 potassium sulfate = K2SO4 +1(2) + -2 = 0
Transition metals:Metals that have more than one possible charge: • Cobalt: Co+2, Co+3 • Copper: Cu+, Cu+2 • Iron: Fe+2, Fe+3 • Lead: Pb+2, Pb+4 • When writing the names, always use roman numerals to show the charge.
Examples: • Cobalt (II) Co+2, Cobalt (III) Co+3 • Copper(I), Cu+, or Copper (II), Cu+2 • Iron(II) Fe+2, or iron (III), Fe+3 • Lead(II), Pb+2, or lead (IV), Pb+4 • Each different charged ion behaves completely different than the other! The charges matter!
Practice! Lead (IV) hydroxide
+3 -2 Iron (III) sulfate Fe2(SO4)3
Hydrates Some ionic compounds absorb water molecules into their structures. These are called hydrates. NaCl•2H2O is the symbol for sodium chloride dihydrate. Notice the prefix di- means 2 water molecules. Name these hydrates: MgSO4•5H2O CuCl2•4H2O
Finding Percentage of Waterin a Hydrate You can find the percentage of water in a hydrate by dividing the mass of the water by the total mass times 100. Lets take NaCl•2H2O Using the periodic table, the mass of Na=23, Cl=35.5, H2O = 18. Total mass with 2 H20 is 94.4 Water mass (36)/ Total (94.4) x 100 = 38 % water
Pop Quiz: HOT or NOT • Ionic Bonding….
HOT, for sure! If Miley says it’s hot, it’s HOT!
Covalent Bonds • What is a Covalent Bond? • - A covalent bond is a chemical bond resulting from SHARING of electrons between 2 nonmetals. • ?
Covalent Bonds can have multiple bonds, so you should be familiar with the following… Single Covalent Bond- chemical bond resulting from sharing of an electron pair between two atoms. H2O Double Covalent Bond- chemical bond resulting from sharing of two electron pairs between two atoms. CO2 Triple Covalent Bond-chemical bond resulting from sharing of three electron pairs between two atoms. N2
Types of Covalent Bonds • Two types of colvalent bonds: nonpolar and polar • Recall electronegativity (desire for electrons) -see shaded table on ole yeller • The electronegativity difference between the two atoms determines whether it is a nonpolar or polar bond. Electronegativity difference: 0 .4 2.0 Nonpolar PolarIonic
Polar Bonds A nonpolar bond tends to share electrons equally A polar bond means there is a dipole or one pole (end) with a positive charge and one pole (end) with a negative charge, therefore they tend to stick together better since their opposite charges attract. (=)(-) Very strong polar bonds are ionic bonds like NaCl
Covalent Bonds Do NOT have ions or need to Balance Charges • They use prefixes to show the number of atoms: • Mono- • Di- • Tri- • Tetra- • Examples: • H2O = dihydrogen monoxide • CO2 = carbon dioxide • dinitrogen tetraoxide = N2O4 • Phosphorus trichloride = PCl3
What are the differences between ionic bonding and covalent bonding? List them below:
Differences: Ionic • Metal , nonmetal-ide • Balance charges using subscripts • Polyatomic ions use parentheses in multiples • Transition metals use roman numerals to show charge
Differences: Covalent • Two nonmetals • Nonmetal, nonmetal-ide • No ions- they share e- • Use prefixes • Don’t need to balance
Differences: Ionic • Metal , nonmetal-ide • Balance charges using subscripts • Polyatomic ions use parentheses in multiples • Transition metals use roman numerals to show charge Covalent • Two nonmetals • Nonmetal, nonmetal-ide • No ions- they share e- • Use prefixes • Don’t need to balance