Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChristina Charity Howard Modified over 8 years ago
2
Chapter Sixteen: Compounds 16.1 Chemical Bonds and Electrons 16.2 Chemical Formulas 16.3 Molecules and Carbon Compounds
3
CHEMICAL BONDING A chemical bond is an attractive force between 2 or more atoms, making a compound. Can be from the same element (O 2 ) or different elements (NaCl) Atoms combine so that they each have a total of 8 valence electrons (full octet)
4
16.1 Valence electrons Chemical bonds are formed only between the electrons in the highest unfilled energy level. These electrons are called valence electrons.
5
16.1 Valence electrons and the periodic table Going from left to right across a period each new element has one more valence electron than the one before it. How many valence electrons does nitrogen have?
6
Group 1 Alkali MetalsGroup 1 Alkali Metals –1 valence e - Group 2 Alkaline-Earth MetalsGroup 2 Alkaline-Earth Metals –2 valence e - Groups 3-12 Transition MetalsGroups 3-12 Transition Metals –Variable valence e - Group 13 Boron GroupGroup 13 Boron Group –3 valence e - Group 14 Carbon GroupGroup 14 Carbon Group –4 valence e - Group 15 Nitrogen Group 5 valence e - Group 16 Oxygen Group 6 valence e - Group 17 Halogens 7 valence e - Group 18 Noble Gases 8 valence e - THIS IS A FULL VALENCE SHELL Exception is Helium, which only has 2, but is still full
7
16.1 Lewis dot diagrams A clever way to keep track of valence electrons is to draw Lewis dot diagrams. A dot diagram shows the element symbol surrounded by one to eight dots representing the valence electrons. What is the dot structure for nitrogen?
9
Chemical Bonding (cont.) 2 types of Chemical Bonds: Ionic Bonds Covalent Bonds
10
Ionic Bonds Occur when atoms gain or lose electrons to form ions Oppositely charged ions are attracted to each other and form a bond Occur only between metals and nonmetals
11
Ionic Bonds (cont.) Metals form Positive (+) ions because they give away electrons Nonmetals form Negative (-) ions because they gain electrons Opposites Attract: Na + Cl - forms NaCl
12
Covalent Bonds Occur when atoms share electrons Rather than lose or gain electrons atoms share their electrons to make a full octet. Only occur between nonmetals. Ex: CO 2, H 2 O
13
16.1 Chemical formulas A molecule’s chemical formula tells you the ratio of atoms of each element in the compound.
14
16.1 Reactivity In chemistry, reactive means an element readily forms chemical bonds, often releasing energy. Some elements are more reactive than others. The closer an element is to having the same number of electrons as a noble gas, the more reactive the element is.
16
16.1 Why chemical bonds form It takes energy to separate atoms that are bonded together. The same energy is released when chemical bonds form. Atoms form bonds to reach a lower energy state.
17
16.1 Valence electrons and the periodic table Oxygen combines with one beryllium atom because beryllium can supply two valence electrons to give oxygen its preferred number of 8.
18
16.1 Valence electrons and the periodic table Carbon has four valence electrons. Two oxygen atoms can bond with a single carbon atom, each oxygen sharing two of carbon’s four valence electrons. The bonds in carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) are double bonds because each bond involves 2 electrons.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.