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Chapter 2 The Material World

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 2 The Material World"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 2 The Material World
Molecules Chapter 2 The Material World

2 Bonds

3 Octet Rule An atom is chemically stable if it has a full outer shell
For most elements this means 8 electrons in its outermost shell An atoms that has fewer than 8 electrons tends to combine with another atom or atoms to fill the outermost shell. Exceptions: H, He, Li, Be and B, desire 1 orbital only with 2 electrons in this shell.

4 Example of an ionic bond:
2+ 2- Mg S

5 What do atoms do to become chemically stable?
Gain electrons (non metals) Lose electrons (metals) Share electrons 2+ 2- Mg S

6 OR What is a chemical bond? It’s the “Glue” holding atoms together
Attraction between opposite charges due to transfer of electrons (ionic bond) Pair of shared electrons (covalent bond) OR

7 Ionic Bonds Bonds formed by the transfer of valence electrons between atoms → Forming ions

8 Covalent Bonds Bonds formed by the sharing of valence electrons between atoms

9 Review: Lewis Dot Notation

10 Lewis Dot Notation Shows only the electrons in the last orbit since these are the electrons involved in chemical bonding. Examples: Na Br

11 Lewis Dot Notation – Ion Formation
The ion an element is most likely to form is dependent on the number of valence electrons Remember the octet rule: each atom wants to have a complete outer ring

12 Lewis Dot Notation – Ion Formation
Example What is the ion that Aluminum forms? 13 p+ Al 3+ Al Al 10 e- 3+ Dropped to lower level

13 Element Lewis Dot Diagram Neutral Chemical Ion Hydrogen Antimony Barium Oxygen

14 Element Lewis Dot Diagram Neutral Chemical Ion Beryllium Polonium Cesium Nitrogen


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