14
COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

COVALENT BONDBOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

Page 2: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

COVALENT BOND

Between nonmetallic elements

Formed by sharing electron pairs

Examples; O2, CO2, C2H6, H2O,

Page 3: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS
Page 4: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

Bonds in all the

polyatomic ions and diatomics

are all covalent

bonds

Page 5: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

WHEN ELECTRONS ARE SHARED EQUALLY

NONPOLAR COVALENT

BONDS

H2 or Cl2

Page 7: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

WHEN ELECTRONS ARE SHARED BUT SHARED UNEQUALLY

POLAR COVALENT

BONDS

H2O

Page 8: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

Polar Covalent Bonds: Unevenly matched, but willing to share.

Page 9: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

- water is a polar molecule because oxygen is more electronegative than hydrogen, and therefore electrons are pulled closer to oxygen.

Page 10: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

ORGANIC AND BIOCHEMICAL COMPOUNDS

Page 13: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

Alkane chemical formulas follow a pattern

The # of hydrogens =the # of carbons x 2 +2

Alkenes have at least 1 double bond ex- ethene

Alkynes have at least 1 triple bond

Page 14: COVALENT BOND BOND FORMED BY THE SHARING OF ELECTRONS

Alcohols have an –OH group

Polymers are large molecules that have repeating subunits ex- cells of body, rubber, wood and plastic milk jugs