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Bonding in Atoms What keeps us together Valence Electrons • Electrons located in the outer shell • Readily available for bonding • Always s or p sublevel • Follows the Octet Rule • Modeled by the Lewis Dot Diagram The Octet Rule • States that an atom will lose or gain electrons in order to fill the outer sublevels (s and p) • Modeled by the Lewis Dot Diagram • Gain of electrons = anion • Loss of electrons = cations Chemical Formulas and Units • A chemical formula shows the kinds of atoms in the molecule as well as the amount of atoms in the molecule • A formula unit is expressed in the smallest whole number ratio for the molecule • Examples: • • • • NaCl TiO2 VCl5 Ca3(PO4)2 Ionic Bonding • Formed from an exchange in electrons forming two charged ions • Electrons are completely exchanged • Strongest type of bond Ionic Bond Characteristics • Compounds of ionic bonding are often solid at room temperature • Compounds will have a high melting point with ionic bonds • Compounds will become conductive when melted or dissolved Binary Ionic Compounds • A Bicycle has how many wheels? • A biplane has how many wings? • A binary compound has how many elements? • A binary ionic compound has two elements where electrons are exchanged • NaCl Sodium Chloride • MgBr2 Magnesium Bromide • Ca3N2 Calcium Nitride Polyatomic Ions • What is polytheism? • What is a polygon? • How about polyatomic ions? • Polyatomic ions are IONS that consist of multiple atoms • Polyatomic ions are used in ionic bonding because there is still an exchange in electrons Covalent Bonding • • • • • • Electrons are shared! Low melting point Liquid or gas at room temperature Volatile Weaker bond Can be polar Covalent Bonding • Bonds can occur as single, double, or triple bonds • Each bond represents a pair of electrons • Best represented in diatomic molecules (F, Cl, Br, I, H, N, O) • Lewis Dot Diagram helps determine where a double or triple bond can occur Covalent Bonding • VSEPR Theory • Valance shell electron pair repulsion theory • Predicts the shape of a molecule (covalent compound) • Lone pair on the central atom push the ligands together altering the bond angles between the ligands • Practice: CHI3, CO2, NH3, CH2O, SO3, HCN VSEPR Shapes Covalent Naming • Name is determined by the number of atoms in the molecule • MUST be covalent • CO2, SO3, O3, C3O6 Van der Waals Forces • London Dispersion Forces • Weakest • Includes compounds with non-polar forces • Increases as the number of electrons increases • Dipole-Dipole Forces • Next strongest • Compounds that are polar • Increases as mass increases • Hydrogen bonding • Extremely strong dipole forces • H-F, H-N, H-O Transition Metals • Transition metals have empty orbitals available for electron movement • This movement results in multiple cations • Cations can be predicted using electron notation • Let’s look at copper! Transition Metal Cations Metallic Bonding • Attraction of free floating electrons in the cloud • Flow of electrons allows for great conductivity • Also allows for malleability • Often arranged in a crystalline structure • Alloys is a mixture that includes at least one metal and enhances the properties of the metal