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Chemistry Chapter 9 Notes #1. Review  Compounds Can all be represented by chemical formulas Can be  Ionic  Metallic  Covalent Compounds have different.

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Presentation on theme: "Chemistry Chapter 9 Notes #1. Review  Compounds Can all be represented by chemical formulas Can be  Ionic  Metallic  Covalent Compounds have different."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chemistry Chapter 9 Notes #1

2 Review  Compounds Can all be represented by chemical formulas Can be  Ionic  Metallic  Covalent Compounds have different properties than the elements that make them up…

3 Review  Ionic Compounds Made up of a metal + nonmetal  (cation + anion) Attraction between positive and negative charge They come together to balance out the positive and negative charge Each chemical formula = formula unit

4 Covalent Compounds  Molecules When atoms are covalently bonded together  Chemical bond = Sharing of electrons  Nonmetal + nonmetal  The shared electrons are considered to be part of BOTH atoms outer energy levels

5 Forces involved  What keeps the atoms together in an ionic bond? Electrostatic attraction  What keeps the atoms together in a covalent bond? Attraction – nucleus to the electrons within each atom (and shared e-)  Repulsive forces: Between the 2 nuclei Btwn the 2 atoms e-  So the covalent bonds are weaker than ionic

6 Electron Dot Structures Electron Dot structures Chemical symbol + valence dots Paired V. unpaired (lone) electrons in electron dot structures…….

7 Bonds  When each atom gives one electron to be shared = single bond In total 2 electrons in the bond  Can be between 2 atoms or more, so that all atoms have 8 valence e-

8 Covalent Compounds-single bonds

9 Covalent Compounds  Multiple Covalent Bonds Double bond =  2 e- from each atom  (4 total) Triple Bond =  3 e- from each atom  (6 total)

10 Covalent Compounds

11 Examples O 2 N 2

12 Covalent Compounds  Naming  Use prefixes in front of the name of the first element Don’t use mono for element #1  Second element (the one to the farther right on the table) ends in -ide # atomsPrefix 1Mono- 2Di- 3Tri- 4Tetra- 5Penta- 6Hexa- 7Hepta- 8Octa- 9Nona- 10Deca-

13 Examples  As 2 O 5  SiO 4  P 4 S 3  Tetraphosphorous decoxide  Selenium dioxide  Phosphorous trichloride

14 Acids  Binary Acids H + one element Starts with “hydro” Name the “other” element, changing the ending to –ic Ex. HBr = Hydrobromic Acid

15 Acids  Oxyacids – H + oxyanion Ignore H (don’t name it) If suffix of the oxyanion ends in –ate, replace with –ic  Ex. HNO 3 = Nitric Acid If suffix of the oxyanion ends in –ite, replace with –ous  Ex. HNO 2 = Nitrous Acid

16 Examples  HCl  H 2 SO 4  H 2 SO 3  H 2 S  HydroFluoric Acid  Carbonic Acid  Bromic Acid


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