Chemical Bonds Chapter 20. Sec. 1 - Combined Elements Elements make  ________________ Properties of compounds are different from ______________ Ex: Sodium.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 20 Chemical Bonds.
Advertisements

Ch. 22 Chemical Bonds. What is a Chemical Formula? When elements combine to form compounds a chemical reaction occurs creating a new compound with properties.
Chapter 6: Chemical Bonds
Ionic Bonds Section 3. Ion An atom or group of atoms that has become electrically charged.
Ionic and Covalent bonding. Bonds All atoms are trying to get enough electrons so that their valence shell is full. All atoms are trying to get enough.
Chemistry Chapter 8 Notes #2.
Chapter 19 Chemical Bonds.
Ionic Bonding. CA Standards  Students know atoms combine to form molecules by sharing electrons to form covalent or metallic bonds or by exchanging electrons.
Chemistry Chapter 8 Notes #1 Ions Compounds  2 or more elements combined Example: Sodium + Chlorine = Sodium Chloride (which is table salt) A compounds.
Atomic Stability and Bonding. Atomic Stability Why do some elements form compounds and other do not? Elements will only form compounds if the resulting.
Chapter 20 Chemical Bonds
Filling the orbitals 1s 2s 2p 3s 3p 4s 3d 4p 5s 4d 5p ...
Objectives Know atoms combine to form molecules by sharing electrons to form covalent or metallic bonds or by exchanging electrons to form ionic bonds.
Chemical Bonds Ionic Bonds.
Chapter 7 Chemical formulas and Bonding Elements tend to react to fill out their outer electron shell (s and p orbitals). This results in a more stable.
Chemical Bond  The attraction between atoms that holds them together and makes them function as a unit.
Chapter 19 Chemical Bonding.
Chemical Bonds Chapter 20.
Compounds and Molecules
Chapter 18: Chemical Bonds
Ionic Compounds: - are made up of positive and negative ions arranged in a crystal structure. (metal and non-metal) Covalent Molecules: - are made up of.
8.2 Ionic Bonding. Ionic Bonds Ionic bonds are made between metal and non-metal atoms Electrons are transferred from the metal atom to the non-metal atom.
Chemical Bonds Physical Science. Valence Electrons Electrons found in the last shell, orbital or energy level Code :  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8  “A” columns.
The Periodic Table Atomic Number (number of protons) Symbol Atomic Mass Period.
Chapter 2: Sections 3 Ionic Bonds What is an Ion? An atom or group of atoms that has become electrically charged An atom or group of atoms that has become.
What is a compound? A substance in which the atoms of two or more different elements combine together Sodium chloride NaCl Carbon dioxide CO 2 Calcium.
Chapter 22 Chemical Bonds.
Rules For Writing Chemical Formulas and Naming Compounds IPC 2007.
Combined elements –Compounds = unique properties from the elements that make them up. –NaCl for example Na = shiny, soft, silvery, metal that reacts violently.
Chemistry Writing Formulas.
 atoms that are now stable because they have gained or lost valence electrons resulting a positively or negatively charged atom.
IPC 7.D Relate the chemical behavior of an element, including bonding, to its placement on the periodic table.
Chemical Bonds I. Why Atoms Combine  Chemical Formulas  Chemical Bonds  Stability.
Unit 9 Chapter 6 – Chemical Bonds. Essential Questions 1)What is the difference between compounds and mixtures? 2)Explain the difference between an ion.
Chemical Bonds Chapter 20. Sec. 1 - Combined Elements Elements make  compounds Properties of compounds are different from elements Ex: Sodium Chloride,
Notes – Chemical Bonding and Electron Transfer Assign # 30 pt.
UEQ: How does the structure of matter influence its physical and chemical behavior?
Naming Ionic Compounds
Physical Science Ch. 19.
Atomic Stability Atoms combine when the compound formed is more stable than the separate atoms Noble gases—seldom form compounds—Why?—They are unusually.
The Structure Of Matter
Notes 6 - Ions & Chemical Bonding. Unstable Atoms ► In order to be stable, an atom needs a certain number of valence electrons  2 valence e - if it only.
Chemical Bonds. Chapter 52 Ions Ions have different numbers of electrons and protons Cations have lost electrons and have net positive charge Anions have.
Types of Bonding. There are two types of bonds: Ionic bonds Covalent bonds.
CHAPTER 19. Unit Content Map Unit EQ: How are ionic and covalent bonds different? Topic: Bonds What are Chemical bonds? Vocabulary: isotope, stable, ionic.
Chemical Bonds I. Why Atoms Combine  Chemical Formulas  Chemical Bonds  Stability.
Chapter 19 – Chemical Bonds
Chemical Bonds: Stability in Bonding Chapter 20 Section 1.
7.1 COMPOUND, ATOMS AND IONS Let’s review: look at these elements: Sodium (metal) Fluorine(non metal) Neon (noble gas)
Ionic Bonding. CA Standards  Students know atoms combine to form molecules by sharing electrons to form covalent or metallic bonds or by exchanging electrons.
Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds. Overview In this chapter, we will be studying 2 primary types of chemical bonds. One: ionic bonds Two: covalent bonds We will.
IONIC & COVALENT BONDING
CHEMICAL BONDS Atoms must have a complete outer energy level to be stable Most atoms of elements: 1.are not stable 2.will need to gain, lose, or share.
..  Valence Electrons ◦ Electrons in highest energy level ◦ Largely responsible for chemical behavior (properties, bonding)  Noble gases have eight.
Chapter 6: Chemical Bonds When the highest occupied energy level of an atom is filled with e, the atom is stable and not likely to react. In other words,
COMPOUNDS AND MOLECULES 4.1 vid WHAT ARE COMPOUNDS? Two or more elements chemically combined to form new substances.
Chemical Bonds Chapter 19 IPC. Combined Elements Some elements combine chemically and no longer have the same properties they did before forming a compound.
Making Molecules and Compounds
6.1 Ionic Bonding   HES Chemistry Unit: Ions and Ionic Bonds.
Naming Ionic and Molecular Compounds. International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry is responsible for naming compounds. IUPAC.
Chemical Compounds Chapter 20.
Chapter 5 – Atoms & Bonding
The Structure Of Matter
Chemical Bonding Physical Science.
Chapter 20 Chemical bonds.
IONIC BONDS Chapter 4 Section 1.
How Atoms Combine.
Chemical Bonds.
I. Why Atoms Combine Chemical Formulas Chemical Bonds Stability
Presentation transcript:

Chemical Bonds Chapter 20

Sec. 1 - Combined Elements Elements make  ________________ Properties of compounds are different from ______________ Ex: Sodium Chloride, __________ (table salt) –Na: silver, metal, reacts violently w/ _____ –Cl: _______________ greenish-yellow gas

Chemical Formulas H 2 O  ___ atoms H and 1 atom O

Atomic Stability Why do atoms form compounds? To be ______________ Why don’t noble gases form compounds? Stable!  __________ energy levels!! All atoms form compounds to get FULL ________________ LEVELS  stable

Atomic Stability

1 st energy level full with ______ e - Other levels full with ______ e -

Stability is Reached NaCl is made from atoms ___________ or gaining electrons H 2 O is different  elements _________ electrons Both ways make a… Chemical ______________: force that holds atoms together in a compound

Types of Bonds Section 2

Ionic Bonds Atoms can lose or ____________ e - to make an ion ____________: a charged particle because it now has either more or fewer e - than p + ______ charge: if fewer e - than p + ______ charge: if more e - than p +

Calcium Oxide - CaO Calcium has __ valence e - ___________ 2 e - and becomes an ion Ca +2 Oxygen has __ valence e - ____________ 2 e - and becomes an ion O -2 Calcium ___________ e - to Oxygen Opposite charges ATTRACT!!

Ionic Bond – Metal and Nonmetal Def: the force of attraction between ________________ charges of the ions Ex: MgCl 2 – ___________ net charge Smallest Particle = formula _________

Covalent Bond – 2 Nonmetals Def: attraction between atoms when they _____________ electrons Smallest particle = ______________ H 2 O CO 2 N 2

Covalent Bonds Single Covalent Bond: ______ shared electrons Multiple Bonds: –Double (____ shared e - ) –Triple (_____ shared e - )

Naming Compounds Section 3

Naming Ionic Compounds Binary compound: has ____ elements Ionic compounds – name of _______ makes name of compound ____________ Ions: name of element –Na + = Sodium ion Negative ions end in – _________ –Cl - = Chloride ion

Special Ions

Polyatomic Ions

Sec. 3 – Writing Formulas Remember… compounds are __________________!! 1.Write the (_____) ion 2.Write the (_____) ion 3._____________ charges: criss-cross method ______________ to smallest whole #s

Write the Formula Lithium Nitride Lead(IV) Phosphide Calcium Fluoride Ammonium Phosphate Magnesium Hydroxide

Naming Ionic Compounds Put the two ion names together! NaCl –Na + = _____________ ion –Cl - = ______________ ion – Sodium Chloride

Practice Naming RbCl Mg 3 N 2 AlF 3 CrCl 3 Ca(OH) 2 Na 2 CO 3 NH 4 Cl

Naming Covalent Compounds _______ ions involved Same ______________ can make different compounds: CO, CO 2 Naming: Use ______________ to tell how many atoms of each element Second element ends in -_________ Prefix ___________ is left out with the first element

Prefixes

Practice Naming N 4 O 6 C 2 O 5 PH 3 Sulfur Hexafluoride Dihydrogen Monoxide

Hydrates Def: has water chemically attached to its ions CoCl 2 6H 2 O ___________________________ CaSO 4 2H 2 O ___________________________