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Covalent & Ionic Bonding The Sharing and Transferring of Electrons

Covalent & Ionic Bonding

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Covalent & Ionic Bonding. The Sharing and Transferring of Electrons. The Difference Between Ionic & Covalent Bonding. http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqjcCvzWwww. What W e K now About Ionic B onding. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Covalent & Ionic Bonding

The Sharing and Transferring of Electrons

Page 2: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

The Difference Between Ionic & Covalent Bonding

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqjcCvzWwww

Page 3: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

What We Know About Ionic Bonding

There is a certain number of electrons that is optimal for atoms to have in their energy shells. That number is 8 and is called an octet.

When an atom has eight electrons in an energy shell, the atom obtains a lower state of energy and is stable.

Page 4: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

What We Know About Ionic Bonding

Ionic bonds are achieved through the transfer of valence electrons (outermost energy shell electrons).

Metals that have three or less electrons, in their valence energy shells, tend to transfer their electrons to nonmetal elements that possess five, six or seven electrons in their valence energy shells.

Page 5: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Ionic BondsThe transfer of valence electrons forms positively and negatively charged “ions”. These oppositely charged ions are attracted to each other. The attractions hold the ions together and formula units are formed.

However, the number of ionically bonded compounds is quite small compared with the total number of compounds formed in the universe.

Page 6: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Sharing Valence ElectronsThe vast majority of compounds are formed from sharing valence electrons.

These bonds are called covalent bonds and the compound that is formed is called a molecule.

In a molecule, the electrons are considered to be part of the valence shell of both atoms.

Page 7: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Hydrogen and Oxygen

Hydrogen and oxygen are both _____________.

If they bond together, would we expect an ionic bond or covalent bond to form?

How many hydrogen atoms would be needed to bond to one oxygen atom?

Page 8: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Water MoleculesLet’s consider water, H2O, as an example.

Hydrogen has one electron in its only energy shell. ________ electrons can fit in this inner energy shell.

Oxygen has six electrons in its outermost energy shell (valence energy shell); it wants __________.

Page 9: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Hydrogen and Oxygen Share Electrons

Page 10: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Sharing Valence Electrons

By sharing their valence electrons, both hydrogen and oxygen acquire an octet completing their outermost energy shells (valence shells).

Possessing an octet in the valence energy shell causes atoms to be more __________.

Page 11: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Using Lewis Dot DiagramsThe graphic we saw of H2O shows all of the electrons that belong to hydrogen and oxygen.

Lewis Dot Diagrams are more convenient to use. They only show the electrons we are interested in, the valence electrons.

The shared electrons are shown as dashes and the remaining electrons (not being shared) are paired up and called “lone pairs”.

Page 12: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Lewis Dot Diagram of WaterA water molecule has ________shared electrons (two shared pairs), shown here as dashes, and _______ lone pairs of electrons.

Page 13: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Carbon

Page 14: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Carbon and Hydrogen Share Electrons

How many valence electrons does carbon have?

How many valence electrons does carbon need to complete its octet?

How many valence electrons does hydrogen have?

How many valence electrons does hydrogen need to complete its valence?

Page 15: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Predicting the Carbon Hydrogen Molecule

Draw what you think a molecule between hydrogen and carbon would look like.

(HINT: Start with carbon as the center of the molecule)

Page 16: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

The Methane Molecule

Page 17: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

The Lewis Dot Diagram of Methane

Methane has _______ shared pairs of electrons and ________ lone pairs of electrons.

Page 18: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Sulfur With All 16 ElectronsHow many electrons does sulfur need to complete its valence energy shell? If sulfur formed bonds with hydrogen, how many hydrogen atoms would be needed?

Page 19: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Sulfur with Six Valence Electrons

Page 20: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Covalent Bond Between Sulfur and Hydrogen

Page 21: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Lewis Structure for H2SWhen sulfur and hydrogen bond, _______electrons are shared (each dash represents ______shared electrons). There are _____lone pairs of electrons in H2S molecule.

Page 22: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Electronegativity & Bonding

Electronegativity describes electron affinity.

In other words, it is a measure of the tendency of an atom to accept an electron.

Bonding is often not clearly ionic or covalent.

Page 23: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

The Electronegativity Difference

One of the periodic table trends we observed was that electronegativity _____________ as youmove from left to right across the periodic table.

To find the difference in the electronegativity between two elements, you ___________their electronegativity values.

Page 24: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Ionic Bonds& The Electronegativity

DifferenceIf the electronegativity difference between two bonding elements is very large, the element with the larger electronegative value will “grab” the valence electrons . This transfer of electrons leads to an ionic bond. If the difference is small the electrons will be shared. This sharing of electrons leads to a covalent bond.

Page 25: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Bond CharacterIonic (transfer)∆ EN 3.3

Mostly Ionic∆ EN > 1.7

Mostly Covalent (Polar)Unequal sharing of electrons∆ EN 0.4 – 1.7

Covalent (Non-polar)Equal sharing of electrons∆ EN = 0.0

Page 26: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Covalent ExampleThe bonding between hydrogen and chlorine:

Cl EN value 3.16H EN value -2.20

.96

The electronegativity difference is .96 which means the bond formed between chlorine and hydrogen is a covalent bond and a HCl molecule is the result.

Page 27: Covalent & Ionic Bonding

Ionic ExampleThe bonding between sodium and chlorine:

Cl EN value 3.16Na EN value -0.93

2.23

The electronegativity difference is 2.23 which means the bond formed between chlorine and sodium is an ionic bond and a NaCl formula unit is the result.