How are atoms held together in a covalent bond?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Covalent Bonds Chapter 6.2 Notes.
Advertisements

Chapter 8: Elements and Chemical Bonds
Chapter 6: Chemical Bonds
IONIC BONDS Gaining or losing electrons Bonds are between metals and nonmetal.
Physical Science Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds. Bonding Chapter 6 is about different types of atomic bonding Forces of attraction is the key to this bonding.
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
Covalent bonds Pg Covalent Bonds G Nonmetals with high ionization energies do not tend to form ionic bonds (transfer of electrons) G Instead.
Chapter 6 Section 2 Pg
Two types of chemical bonds are Ionic Bonds and Covalent Bonds Chemical Bonding: Covalent Bonding.
Ionic Bonding & Covalent Bonding. Ionic Bonding Ionic Bonding – TRANSFER of electrons Metals + Nonmetals = Ionic Bond.
Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds.
Physical Science Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds. Bonding Chapter 6 is about different types of atomic bonding Forces of attraction is the key to this bonding.
Notes 5-3 Covalent Bonds COVALENT BOND A force that bonds two atoms together by a sharing of electrons Each pair of shared electrons creates.
Covalent Bonding & Polarity Chapter 6.2. Chemical Bonding  Ionic Bond – Force that holds cations and anions together and which involves the transfer.
Covalent Bonds: Notes 5-3
Physical Science Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds. Bonding Chapter 6 is about different types of atomic bonding Forces of attraction is the key to this bonding.
Pearson Prentice Hall Physical Science: Concepts in Action
6.2 Covalent Bonding Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the.
Unit 6A: Ionic and Covalent Bonding. Ions Why do elements in the same group behave similarly? They have the same number of valence electrons. Valence.
6.2 Covalent Bonding.
Chapter 5 Section 3 Notes The chemical bond formed when two atoms share electrons is called a covalent bond. Except for noble gases, nonmetals can bond.
C HAPTER 6: C HEMICAL BONDS. S TABLE E LECTRON C ONFIGURATIONS When is an atom unlikely to react? When the highest occupied energy level of an atom is.
Covalent Bonding Occurs when atoms share electrons Different from ionic bonding Ionic Bond = Atoms completely transfer electrons Covalent bonding occurs.
Polarity Ch 6.2b. Covalent Bonding  When two nonmetals meet - one atom is NOT strong enough to take electrons from the other!  So they must share them.
Bonding  Compounds are formed when atoms join together.  They are held together by bonds.  Non – metal elements are joined together by a Covalent Bond.
6.2 Covalent Bonding Key Concepts:
Physical Science Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds. Bonding Chapter 6 is about different types of atomic bonding Forces of attraction is the key to this bonding.
6-1: Ionic Bonding 6-2: Covalent Bonding 6-3: Naming Formulas and Writing Compounds.
National 5 Chemistry 1.3 The Importance of Chemical Bonding Covalent Bonding in Molecules.
Shared Electrons Sometimes atoms achieve a stable configuration by sharing electrons Covalent bonding occurs when atoms share a pair of valence electrons.
Ch 2.1 Elements combine to form compounds. Compounds have different properties from elements Elements have individual properties that help us identify.
Chemical Bonds. Ionic Bonding Stable electron configurations Ionic Bonds Ionic Compounds.
Chapter 3 Section 2.
Bonding Chapter 8.
Goals 1. What is a covalent bond? Be able to describe the nature of covalent bonds and how they are formed. 2. How does the octet rule apply to covalent.
Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds.
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
CHEMICAL BONDING IONIC BONDS COVALENT BONDS HYDROGEN BONDS.
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
Pearson Prentice Hall Physical Science: Concepts in Action
How is a compound different from the elements that make it up?
Ionic Compounds Compounds that contain ionic bonds are ionic compounds, which can be represented by chemical formulas. A chemical formula is a notation.
Chemical Bonds Section 2.3.
Honors Chemistry Chapter 6 Covalent Bonding and Lewis Structures
Bonding.
Covalent Bonds (6.2).
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
Atomic Number = number of protons In atom
How do elements join together to form chemical bonds?
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
most abundant elements
H2O.
Section 2: Covalent Bonds
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
6.2 & 6.3 Molecules Key Concepts
6.2 Covalent Bonding By: The Freshman Class!.
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
Physical Science Covalent Bonding.
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
Living things consist of atoms of different elements.
Chapter 8 “Covalent Bonding”
Pearson Prentice Hall Physical Science: Concepts in Action
Chemical Compounds and Bonds
Physical Science Chapter Six
Chapter 6 Chemical Bonds.
Chemical Bonds Study Guide Answers.
Section 3 – Covalent Bonds Pg 192
Plants absorb water through their roots from soil or from a solution containing nutrients. Carbon dioxide from the air enters the plants through small.
6.2 Covalent Bonds A covalent bond is a chemical bond in which two nonmetal atoms share a pair of valence electrons How are atoms held together in a covalent.
Ions An atom that has lost or gained electrons is called an ion. An ion is a charged particle because it now has either more or fewer electrons than.
Presentation transcript:

How are atoms held together in a covalent bond? Covalent Bonds How are atoms held together in a covalent bond? Attractions between the_______electrons and the protons of each nucleus Covalent bond: chemical bond in which 2 atoms share a pair of_______________electrons

Covalent Bonds Sharing Electrons A hydrogen atom has one electron. If it had two electrons, it would have the same electron configuration as a helium atom. Two hydrogen atoms can achieve a stable electron configuration by sharing their electrons and forming a covalent bond. When 2 atoms share a pair of electrons = ____ bond.

There are several ways to show a covalent bond: Covalent Bonds There are several ways to show a covalent bond: Electron___model: bond is shown by a pair of dots in the space between the symbols for the atoms __________formula: the pair of dots is replaced by a line Electron_________and space-filling models: show that orbitals of atoms overlap when a covalent bond forms.

Covalent Bonds Molecules of Elements Two hydrogen atoms bonded together form a unit called a molecule. Molecule: a _______group of atoms that are joined by one or more covalent bonds

Covalent Bonds The hydrogen molecule is neutral because it contains two protons (one from each atom) and two electrons (one from each atom). A ___________________can be used to describe the molecules of an element as well as a compound. The element hydrogen has the chemical formula H2. Subscript gives # of _____________for a given element

Covalent Bonds Many nonmetal elements exist as_______________molecules. Diatomic means “_____atoms.”

Covalent Bonds Multiple Covalent Bonds When two atoms share three pairs of electrons, the bond is called a ___________bond. When two atoms share two pairs of electrons, the bond is called a ____________bond. Nitrogen has five valence electrons. When the atoms in a nitrogen molecule (N2) share three pairs of electrons, each atom has eight valence electrons. Each pair of shared electrons is represented by a long dash in the structural formula NN.

Unequal Sharing of Electrons When atoms form a ______covalent bond, the atom with greater attraction for electrons has a partial negative charge and the other has a partial positive charge. The type of atoms in a molecule and its shape determine whether a molecule is polar or nonpolar.

Unequal Sharing of Electrons Polar Covalent Bonds In a molecule of a compound, electrons may not be shared unequally. A covalent compound forms when hydrogen reacts with chlorine. A chlorine atom has a greater attraction for electrons than a hydrogen atom does. In a hydrogen chloride molecule, the shared electrons spend more time near the chlorine atom than near the hydrogen atom. A covalent bond in which electrons are not shared_______is called a polar covalent bond.

Unequal Sharing of Electrons Polar and Nonpolar Molecules Can you assume that a molecule that contains a polar covalent bond is polar? When a molecule has only two atoms(of different elements), it will be ____________. When molecules have more than two atoms, the answer is not obvious.

Unequal Sharing of Electrons In a carbon dioxide (CO2) molecule, the polar bonds between the carbon atom and the oxygen atoms cancel out because the molecule is linear. In a water (H2O) molecule, the polar bonds between the oxygen atom and the hydrogen atoms do not cancel out because the molecule is bent.

Attraction Between Molecules Attractions between polar molecules are __________ than attractions between nonpolar molecules. In a molecular compound, there are forces of attraction between molecules. These attractions are not as strong chemical bonds, but they are strong enough to hold molecules together in a liquid or solid. Attractions among nonpolar molecules explain why carbon dioxide can exist as dry ice and why nitrogen can be stored as a liquid at low temperatures and high pressures.

Attraction Between Molecules Dashed lines represent attractions between partially positive hydrogen atoms and partially negative oxygen atoms. The symbols – and + are used to indicate a partial charge.