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Chapter 19: Atoms, Molecules, and Extended-Bonding Substances Did you read chapter 19 before coming to class? A.Yes B.No Did you read chapter 19 before.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 19: Atoms, Molecules, and Extended-Bonding Substances Did you read chapter 19 before coming to class? A.Yes B.No Did you read chapter 19 before."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 19: Atoms, Molecules, and Extended-Bonding Substances Did you read chapter 19 before coming to class? A.Yes B.No Did you read chapter 19 before coming to class? A.Yes B.No

2 Chemical matter is classified into a number of types

3 Elements vs Compounds  Elements: only one kind of atom  Compounds: two or more kinds of atoms  Which are elements?  Which are compounds?

4 Chemical Bonds  The constituent atoms in molecules are held together by “bonds”. A bond is usually a pair of electrons. Strong Bonds: Metallic, Ionic, Covalent Weak Bonds: van der Waals, Hydrogen  The quantum model explains them all Chapters 20-23 will feature each of the bonding types  In our visual models we often use sticks to represent bonds, and balls to represent atoms

5 How does bonding work?  Atoms give up, obtain, or share electrons and in the process combine to form the substances around us.  Bonding involves only the electrons in the outermost, unfilled orbitals: the valence electrons. All other inner electrons don’t matter as far as bonding is concerned. All bonding involves atoms sharing or exchanging electrons in a “stable” way. Stability means: To fall to a lower energy state and thus be more tightly bound. To completely fill an orbital set.

6 Writing chemical formulas for molecular matter  Identify atoms in a molecule  Give the number of each atom type  Examples H 2 O S 8 CH 4

7 Write down the chemical formula for these two molecules Glycine One of the 23 essential Amino acids NH 2 CH 2 COOH Hydrogen peroxide Bleach and disinfectant

8 Chemical Formulas for Network/Extended Matter 1.Identify kinds of atoms 2.Give the relative number of each atom type Atoms of metallic Mg Sodium chloride NaCl Na Cl Quartz SiO 2 Si O

9 Molecules have shapes  How many ways can you arrange Carbon and Hydrogen?  Guess the shape of Benzene C 6 H 6 Tetrahedral Planar Linear Friedrich August Kekulé discovered benzene’s structure

10 The shape of a molecule is determined by molecular orbitals  When H 2 was formed from H, energy was released as heat.  So in H 2 each electron needs more energy than before to escape. HH H2H2 The electrons sit lower in the energy well than before

11 Molecules belong to families -- Hydrocarbons Methane -- CH 4 Propane -- CH 3 CH 2 CH 3 (or C 3 H 8 ) Octane -- CH 3 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 (or C 8 H 18 ) Formulas? What elements are present? All react to form CO 2 and H 2 O methane, propane, octane belong to hydrocarbon family all three are used as fuels

12 What formula represents this family of molecules? CH 4 C3H8C3H8 C 4 H 10 where n is an integer starting with 1 A.(CH 2 ) n B.C n H 2n+2 C.C n H n+2 D.C 2n H n

13 Another molecular family – Organic acids CH 3 CO 2 H -- Acetic acid (gives vinegar its taste) CH 3 (CH 2 ) 10 CO 2 H Lauric acid – in coconut milk CH 3 (CH 2 ) 14 CO 2 H -- Palmitic acid (palm oils, and animals) family of organic acids - all three are in foods we eat What groups of atoms are common to all three molecules? CH 3 __ CH 2 __ __ CO 2 H (carboxyl)

14 Amino Acids, the building blocks for protiens NH 2 CH 2 CO 2 H NH 2 CHCH 3 CO 2 H NH 2 C 10 H 9 NHCO 2 H Formulas? What elements are present? family of amino acids – acid group + amino group -- also in foods we eat What groups of atoms are common to all three molecules? NH 2 __ (amine) __ CO 2 H (Carboxyl)

15 Deducing molecular formulae and structures: Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometer accelerator plates detector positive fragments Length of flight path kinetic energy = ½(mass)(speed) 2 If all fragments are given the same kinetic energy, which ones get to the detector first? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKxRx0ctrl0&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKxRx0ctrl0&feature=related time Number of fragments

16 What molecule does this mass spectrum represent? a)CO b)H 2 0 c)NO d)CO 2 A sample is loaded onto the MS instrument, and undergoes vaporizationvaporization The components of the sample are ionized by one of a variety of methods (e.g., by impacting them with an electron beam), which results in the formation of charged particles (ions)electron beamions The ions are separated according to their mass-to-charge ratio in an analyzer by electromagnetic fieldsmass-to-charge ratioelectromagnetic The ions are detected, usually by a quantitative method The ion signal is processed into mass spectra

17 Mass Spectroscopy Masses of molecular fragments Parent peak: Mass of the molecule 180 amu C 9 O 4 H 8 Aspirin Deducing molecular structure with a mass spectrometer

18 Motion within a molecule  Bonds are not rigid lengths change Bond angles bend – angle opens and closes  The various types of stretches and bends occur with different energies  Energy depends on how stiff the bond is and the atomic masses that are moving.  http://www2.ess.ucla.edu/~schauble/MoleculeHTML/CH4_ht ml/CH4_page.html http://www2.ess.ucla.edu/~schauble/MoleculeHTML/CH4_ht ml/CH4_page.html

19 A simplified view of infrared spectroscopy Infrared Source Sample Detector continuous IR spectrum Absorption IR spectrum (continuous with dark bands) Analogous visible continuous spectrumAnalogous visible absorption spectrum

20 IR spectroscopy can be used to deduce chemical formulas and structures IR Vibrational Spectroscopy Energy of vibration Different molecular groups vibrate in different regions C 9 O 4 H 8 Aspirin C=O fingerprint region

21 A portion of the IR spectrum for each molecule is shown. Formulate a hypothesis about what portion of the molecule gives rise to the sharp set of peaks labeled P? A A A A OH group Hydrocarbon part P

22 How do we deduce chemical formulas and structures? Crystallography


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