Chemical Structure: Chemical Nomenclature. Inorganic Compounds
Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature...Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature Chemical Reactivity •How...
Transcript of Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature...Chemical Bonding and Nomenclature Chemical Reactivity •How...
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Chemical Bonding
and Nomenclature
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Chemical Reactivity
• How much an element reacts depends on
the electron configuration of its atoms.
• Every element wants 8 valence electrons.
• Oxygen only has six, so it wants two more
• Neon already has eight.
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Chemical Reacitivity
• Neon is a noble gas.
• The noble gases, which are found in Group
18 of the periodic table, show almost no
chemical reactivity.
• The noble gases have filled outer energy
levels.
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Review of Valence Electrons
• Remember that valence electrons are the
electrons in the OUTERMOST energy level
• B is 1s22s22p1
– Outer energy level is 2
– There are 2 + 1 = 3 electrons in energy level 2
– These are the valence electrons.
• Br is [Ar] 4s23d104p5
– How many valence electrons are present?
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Valence Electrons
• All atoms are uncharged because they have equal
numbers of protons and electrons.
• For example, a potassium atom has 19 protons and
19 electrons.
• After giving up one electron, potassium still has
19 protons but only 18 electrons.
• Because the numbers are not the same, there is a
net electrical charge.
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Octet Rule
• In most chemical reactions, atoms tend to
match the s and p electron configurations of the
noble gases.
• This tendency to have either empty outer
energy levels or full outer energy levels of eight
electrons is called the octet rule.
– Potassium after it loses one electron has the same electron configuration as chlorine after it gains one.
– The atoms of many elements become stable by achieving the electron configuration of a noble gas.
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• An ion is an atom, radical, or molecule that has
gained or lost one or more electrons and has a
negative or positive charge.
• An ion with a positive charge is called a cation.
• An ion with a negative charge is called an anion.
Ions
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Predicting Ionic Charges
Group 1: Lose 1 electron to form 1+ ions
H+ Li+ Na+ K+
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Group 2: Loses 2 electrons to form 2+ ions
Be2+ Mg2+ Ca2+ Sr2+ Ba2+
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Group 13: Loses 3
electrons to form
3+ ions
B3+ Al3+ Ga3+
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Group 14: Lose 4
electrons or gain
4 electrons?
Neither! Group 13 elements rarely form ions.
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Group 15: Gains 3
electrons to form
3- ions
N3-
P3-
As3-
Nitride
Phosphide
Arsenide
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Group 16: Gains 2
electrons to form
2- ions
O2-
S2-
Se2-
Oxide
Sulfide
Selenide
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Group 17: Gains 1
electron to form
1- ions
F1-
Cl1-
Br1- Fluoride
Chloride
Bromide
I1- Iodide
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Group 18: Stable Noble gases do not form ions!
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Groups 3 - 12: Many transition elements
have more than one possible oxidation state.
Iron(II) = Fe2+ Iron(III) = Fe3+
Predicting Ionic Charges
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Reviewing Types of Ions
• Cation – A positively charged particle
• Elements with almost empty valence shells (metals lose
electrons to become positively charged
• The overall charge on the ion is positive due to excess
positive nuclear charge (protons do NOT change in
chemical reactions).
• Anion – A negatively charged particle
• Elements with almost full valence shells (non-metals)
tend to gain electrons to become negatively charged.
• The overall charge on the ion is negative because of the
gain, and therefore excess, of negative electrons.
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More than two elements
• Instead of having ions made of a single atom, many
ionic compounds have groups of atoms that are ions.
• A polyatomic ion is a charged group of two or more
bonded atoms that can be considered a single ion.
– Polyatomic ions work in the same way as simple ions
– Covalent bonds hold the polyatomic ion together so it
behaves as a unit
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Some Polyatomic Ions:
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Chemical bond
• The force of electrical attraction
that holds together the atoms in
compounds
• There are three general types of
bonding
– Ionic
– Covalent
– Metallic
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Ionic Bonding
• An ionic bond is formed by a metal and a nonmetal
• Ionic bonds are formed by one atom transferring electrons to another atom to form ions.
– The force of attraction between the 1+ charge on the
sodium cation and the 1 charge on the chloride
anion creates the ionic bond in sodium chloride.
– Example: sodium chloride is a salt, the scientific
name given to many different ionic compounds.
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An atom of sodium
transfers the electron in
its outer shell to an atom
of chlorine.
The oppositely charged sodium and chloride ions are
attracted to one another, forming sodium chloride.
Having given up
an electron,
sodium becomes a
positively charged
ion.
Having received an
electron, chlorine
becomes a
negatively charged
ion.
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Characteristics of ionic compounds
• Solid at room temperature
• Crystalline
• Do not conduct electricity as a solid
• Conduct electrical current in solution or
when molten
• High melting point
• Brittle
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Ionic bonding and Structures of
Ionic Compounds
• Ions are packed together to maximize the
attractions between ions
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Ionic bonding and Structures of
Ionic Compounds
• Cations are always
smaller than the
parent atom
• Anions are always
larger than the
parent atom
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Example sodium and chlorine
• Sodium is a silver-colored metal that reacts so violently with water that flames are produced when sodium gets wet.
• Chlorine is a greenish-colored gas that is so poisonous that it was used as a weapon in World War I.
• When chemically bonded together, these two dangerous substances form the compound sodium chloride, a compound so safe that we eat it every day - common table salt!
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Sodium and chlorine (continued)
+
Sodium
metal
chlorine
gas
table
salt
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Salts
• Salts that are made of a simple cation and a simple
anion are known as binary ionic compounds.
• The adjective binary indicates that the compound
is made up of just two elements.
• All salts are electrically neutral ionic compounds
that are made up of cations and anions held
together by ionic bonds in a simple, whole-number
ratio.
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Ionic Compounds are Salts
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Writing the chemical formulas of
ionic compounds
• Monatomic ions
– Write the symbol for the cation (has a positive
charge) first.
– Write the symbol for anion (has a negative
charge) second.
– Use subscripts below each element symbol so
that the sum of the positive and negative
charges equal to zero.
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Writing Ionic Compound Formulas
Example: Aluminum sulfide
1. Write the formulas for the
cation and anion, including
CHARGES!
2. Check to see if charges are
balanced.
3. Balance charges , if necessary,
using subscripts. (Use
parentheses if you need more
than one of a polyatomic ion.)
Al3+ S2-
Not balanced!
2 3
Now Balanced!
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Chemical nomenclature
• A systematic method of naming compounds
according to IUPAC (International Union of Pure
and Applied Chemistry)
• There are three general types of compounds to
name, but the rules are generally the same.
– Ionic
– Covalent
– Organic
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Naming Ionic Compounds
• The name of a binary ionic compound is made up of just two words: the name of the cation followed by the name of the anion.
NaCl sodium chloride CuCl2 copper(II) chloride
ZnS zinc sulfide Mg3N2 magnesium nitride
K2O potassium oxide Al2S3 aluminum sulfide
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Rules of nomenclature
• Positive Ions
– Cations take the name of the element
• Example: Na+ = sodium ion
– If an element can form more than one (1) positive ion, the charge is indicated by Roman numeral in parentheses and named for the element
• Example: Fe2+ = iron(II)
• Example: Fe3+ = iron (III)
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Nomenclature (continued)
• Negative Ions
– Anions (a single atom with a negative charge)
– change their ending to “-ide”
• Example: O2- = oxide
• Example: Cl- = chloride
– Polyatomic Ions (ions made up of more than
one atom that are covalently bonded, but have
an overall charge as a group) – simply name
the ion
• Example: CO32- = Carbonate
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Ionic Bond Review
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