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Modern Chemistry Chapter 6 Chemical Bonding

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Presentation on theme: "Modern Chemistry Chapter 6 Chemical Bonding"— Presentation transcript:

1 Modern Chemistry Chapter 6 Chemical Bonding
Sections 1-5 Introduction to Chemical Bonding Covalent Bonding & Molecular Compounds Ionic Bonding & Ionic Compounds Metallic Bonding Molecular Geometry Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

2 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Molecule Molecular compound Chemical formula Molecular formula Bond energy Electron-dot notation Lewis Structure Structural formula Single bond Multiple bond Resonance Chapter Vocabulary Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

3 Covalent Bonding and Molecular Compounds
Section 2 Covalent Bonding and Molecular Compounds Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

4 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Molecules A neutral group of atoms that are held together by covalent bonds Has all the physical and chemical properties of the compound May consist of two or more atoms of the same element Diatomic elements I2 Br2 Cl2 F2 O2 N2 H2 Molecular elements S8 P4 I Bring Clay For Our New House & Swimming Pool. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

5 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Formulas Chemical Formula – indicates the relative numbers of atoms of each kind in a chemical compound by using symbols and numeric subscripts Molecular Formula – shows the types and number of atoms in a single molecule Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

6 Chemical Formula Animation
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

7 Formation of Covalent Bonds
p. 179 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

8 Formation of a Covalent Bond
Forces to consider Electrons repel each other Protons and electrons attract each other e- to p+ attraction is greater than the e- to e- repulsion Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

9 Formation of a Covalent Bond
Potential Energy and Stability High P.E. is related to low stability Low P.E. is related to high stability Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

10 Bond Length & Stability
p. 179 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

11 Characteristics of Covalent Bonds
Bond Length – the distance between two bonded atoms at their minimum potential energy Energy is released when a bond forms The same amount of energy is required to break that bond Bond Energy – the energy required to break a chemical bond and form neutral atoms. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

12 Bond Energy & Length Table
p. 182 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

13 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Bond Length Animation Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

14 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Bond Energy Animation p. xx Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

15 Noble Gas Configuration
p. 183 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

16 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Octet Rule Chemical compounds tend to form so that each atom by gaining, losing or sharing electrons has an octet of electrons in its highest energy level Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

17 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Octet Rule Exceptions Less than 8 electrons Boron Three valence electrons Stable with only six instead of eight Beryllium Two valence electrons Stable with only four instead of eight B Always!! Be Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

18 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Octet Rule Exceptions Expanded valence - involves the d orbitals as well as s & p Phosphorus Five valence electrons Stable with only ten instead of eight Sulfur Six valence electrons Stable with only twelve instead of eight P Not Always!! S Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

19 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Octet Rule Animation Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

20 Lewis Structures Animation
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

21 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Lewis Structures Formulas in which the symbols represent nuclei and inner shell electrons, dashes or dot-pairs between symbols represent covalent bonds and dots by one symbol represent unshared pairs. Shared pairs = a bond Unshared pairs = a lone pear Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

22 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Lone Pair Animation Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

23 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Structural Formula Indicates the type, number and arrangement of the atoms and the bonds but not the unshared pairs Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

24 Structural Formula Animation
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

25 How to Draw Lewis Structures
1. Do the math to determine the number of bonds (1 x 8) + (3 x 2) + (1 x 8) = 22 e- C H3 I _ (1 x 4) + (3 x 1) + (1 x 7) = 14 e- 8 e- /2 = 4 Divide the total by 2 to get the number of bonds in the molecule. Subtract the “have” from the “need”. All atoms need 8 electrons to be stable, except H which only needs 2. All atoms have their valence electrons available for bonding. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

26 How to Draw Lewis Structures
2. Arrange the atoms as symetrically as possible, with a central atom. H H C I H C is the central atom if it is present. H and halogens go on the outside. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

27 How to Draw Lewis Structures
3. Connect with bonds. H H C I H If you have too many bonds, double or triple up. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

28 How to Draw Lewis Structures
4. Add unshared pairs so that all atoms have 8e- (except H) H H C I H Try page 186 #1-4 Practice. A bond counts as two electrons. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

29 Multiple Covalent Bonds
Single bond: 2 e- are shared by 2 atoms Double bond: 4 e- are shared by 4 atoms Triple bond: 6 e- are shared by 3 atoms Occur commonly with C, N and O STRONG single bond SHORT STRONGER double bond SHORTER STRONGEST triple bond SHORTEST Table on page 187 Try page 188 #1 & 2 Practice Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

30 Multiple Bonds Animation
p. xx Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

31 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Resonance Structures Bonding in molecules that cannot be correctly represented by a single Lewis structure. Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

32 Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages 178-189
Resonance Animation p. xx Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

33 Lewis Structures Practice
C2Cl4 SCl2 AsF5 CI2Cl2 BF3 NO 1- CH2O IO3 1- Lewis Structures Practice Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages

34 Section 2 Homework Chapter 6 Section 2 Worksheet
Chapter 6 Section 2 Covalent Bonding... pages


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