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I.
Compounds & Molecules
A. Compounds- made of atoms of more than
one element bound together.
1. Chemical bond- Attractive force that
holds atoms or ions together.
2. Compounds Vs. Mixtures
a) 2 or more elements bond together w/
different properties than originals.
b) Mixture- different substances are
just placed together and retain
original properties.
3. Formula & proportion
a) Compounds always have the same
chemical formula
ex: Salt NaCl H2O
1
a)Compounds always have the same
elements in the same composition.
Ex: H2O
2 Hydrogen, 1 Oxygen.
4. Chemical Structure- the arrangement of
bonded atoms or ions within a
substance.
a)Determines properties of the
compound.
b)2 terms about position.
1)Bond length- Distance between
nuclei of 2 bonded atoms.
2)Bond angles-the orientation of 3
or more atoms.
2
5. Models of compounds:
a)Ball-and-stick – Shows bond angle and
bond length. Figure 4-3
b)Space-filling - space occupied by
each atom. Figure 4-4
3
B. Structure and Properties
1. Some compounds exist as a large network
of bonded atoms  repeating formula.
2. Network atoms structures
a) Strong solids  bonds are strong
Ex: Quartz in rocks  very strong,
rigid.
1)So strong that melting point(1700oC)
& boiling point(2230oC) is high.
b) Bonded ions
1)Strong network of repeating ions
a)Ex: NaCl
Na+ Cl- Na+ Cl- Na+ Clb)Strong attraction between
oppositely charged ions  high
melting point(801oC) & boiling
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point(1413oc).
3.
Compounds made of molecules
a) Molecule- smallest unit of a substance
the exhibits all the properties of
that substance.
b) Sugar- made of molecules C,H,O
1) Bonds between C,H,O are higher than
attraction between individual sugar
molecules.
II. Ionic & covalent bonds

Atoms bond when their electrons
interact.
A.
Ionic Bonds- a bond formed by
attraction between oppositely
ions. [metals (+) & nonmetals
1. Positive ions (Na+) attract
ions (Cl-)
the
charged
(-)]
negative
5
2. 1 positive ion attracts several
negative ions  these negative
attracts positive ions => forms a
network of ions.
3. Formulas:
a)NaCl
Na+ 1
1:1 ratio
Cl- 1
b)CaF2
Ca2+ 1
1:2 ratio
F2
4. Conduct electicity
a)Solid ionic compounds cannot
conduct electricity because
charged ions are locked in place ~
Na+ Cl6
b)If dissolved in H2O, it doesn’t
conduct electricity  Because ions
are free to move.
B. Metallic Bonds- A bond formed by the
attraction between positively charged
metal ions & e- around them.
1. Metal’s nucleus is attracted to
neighboring e-  causes the atom to be
closely packed. Fig. 4-13
a)Energy levels overlap  e- move more
freely from atom to atom.
b)Explains why metals conduct
electricity so well.
7
C. Covalent Bonds- a bond formed when atoms
share one or more pairs of electrons.
1. Networks of bonded atoms have covalent
bonds.
2. Can be solid,liquid,or gas; usually
between nonmetals.
3. Most have a low melting point < 300oC
4. Do not conduct electricity because they
are not charged.
5. Chlorine molecule, Cl2
a)Each Cl atom has 7 valence e- =>
needs 1 more.
b)Each Cl atom shares 1 e- => now each
Cl atom has full energy level.
c) e- are shared equally => nonpolar
covalent bond.
8
6. Atoms may share more than 1 pair of ea)O2
1)6 valence e- => needs 2
2)So have 2 covalent bonds
O = O
b)N2
1)5 valence e- => needs 3
2)Has 3 covalent bonds
N ≡ N
3)Triple stronger than double bonds
7. Two different atoms sharing ea) e- are shared unequally => Polar
covalent bond.
b) e- usually more attracted to atoms
upper right of the periodic table.
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D. Polyatomic Ions- ion made of two or more
atoms that are covalently bonded and
that act like a single ion.
1. Ex:
a)Hydroxide OHb)Nitrate NO3c)Hydrogen carbonate ion HCO3d)Ammonium ion NH4+
2. Charge is for entire ion, not just
last atom
3. Ammonium sulfate
a)(NH4)2SO4 not N2H8SO4
b)Parenthesis show subscript applies
to entire ion.
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4. -ate Vs. –ite
a)Suffix –ate
1)Name the ion with the one more
oxygen atom.
2)EX: sulfate ion SO42nitrate ion NO3
b)Suffix –ite
1)Name the ion with one less oxygen
atom.
2)Ex: sulfite ion SO23nitrite ion NO2
11
III. Compound names and formulas
A. Naming ions
1. Names of ionic compounds include the
ions of which they are composed.
a) Cation named stays the same
1) Ex: sodium Na+
b) Anion’s name changes its ending.
1) Ex: Fluorine  Fluoride Fnitrogen  Nitride N3c) NaF= Sodium Fluoride
CaCl2= Calcium Chloride
2. Transition Metals may form several
cations.
12
a) Table 4-6
1)Copper (I) Cu+
Titanium (II) Ti2+
Copper (II) Cu2+
Titanium (III) Ti3+
Iron (II) Fe+
Titanium (IV) Ti4+
Iron (II) Fe3+
b) Cation is followed by a roman #
1)Roman number shows the charge
c) Ex: FeO
Vs. Fe2O3
O2iron(II)Oxide
iron(III)Oxide
d) Fe2O3
Fe3+
1)O has –2 charge + there are 3 of
them  -2 x 3 = -6
2)Ionic compounds must be neutral, so
need + 6
3)2 Fe atoms, so charge must be +3
13
B. Naming Covalent Compounds
1. Numerical prefixes are used to name
covalent compounds of two elements.
a)Table 4-7 page 126
Prefixes for covalent Compounds
mono1
hexa6
di2
hepta7
tri3
octa8
tetra- 4
nona9
penta- 5
deca10
14
b)Rules:
1)If only 1 atom for first element,
then no prefix (understood)
2)Element farthest to the right on
periodic table is second + ends in
–ide.
c)Examples:
1)BF3
 Boron triflouride
2)N2O4
 Dinitrogen tetroxide
2. Chemical Formulas for Covalent Compound
a)Empirical formula – simplest chemical
formula of a compound that tells the
smallest whole number ratio.
1)Water – H2O 2H:1O ratio
15
2)Different compounds can have same
empirical formula
a. Examples:
i. Formaldehyde CH2O
CH2O
ii.Glucose
CH2O
C6H12O6
b)Molecular formula – formula that
reports the actual numbers of atoms
in one molecule of a compound.
1)Glucose
6C
12H 6O
16
IV. Organic + Biochemical Compounds
A. Organic Compounds – covalently bonded
compound that contains Carbon.
1. Carbon forms four covalent bonds.
a) Hydrocarbon – contains C and
hydrogen.
1) Alkanes – hydrocarbons that have
only single covalent bonds.
a. Ends always in –ane.
b. Methane CH4
c. Ethane C2H6
d. Formula: CnH2n+2
e. Table 4-9 page 131
17
2)Alkenes – have at least one double
bond between atoms.
a. Ends always in –ene.
b. Ethene C2H4
c. Propene C3H6
d. Formula: CNH2N
2. Alcohols – have a hydroxyl, or –OH
group bonded with it.
a. Methanol, CH3OH
b. Ethanol, C2H5OH
3. Polymers – large organic molecule made
of many smaller bonded units.
a)Examples:
1)Polyethene, milk jugs
poly = many , many ethenes 18
B. Biological Compounds
1. Carbohydrates – organic compound made
of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
a)Provides energy for living things.
b)Glucose C6H12O6
2. Proteins and Amino Acids
a)Amino acids – 20 total
1)Made of Carbon, oxygen, hydrogen,
nitrogen, and sometimes sulfur.
b)Proteins – long chain of amino acids.
3. DNA – Deoxyribonucleic Acid
a)Made of C, H, O, Nitrogen, +
Phosphorus
b)Double Helix
19