5.1 - Electrons And Bonding Flashcards

1
Q

What are electron shells?

A

Help us visualise the whereabouts of electrons in an atom

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2
Q

Features of electron shells

A

Shells are regarded as energy levels

The energy increases as the shell number increases

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3
Q

What are electron shells made up of?

A

They are made up of atomic orbitals

This a region around the nucleus that can hold up to two electrons with opposite spins

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4
Q

What are the four different atomic orbitals?

A

S
P
D
F

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5
Q

What shape are each of the orbitals?

A

S - sphere
P - dumbbell
D - more complex
F - more complex

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6
Q

How many electrons in each shell?

A

1 - 2 electrons
2 - 8 electrons
3 - 18 electrons
4 - 32 electrons

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7
Q

Where do the electrons come from in each shell?

Which sub shells are present?

A

1 - 1s - 2 electrons
2 - 2s, 2p = 2 + 6 = 8
3 - 3s, 3p, 3d = 2 + 6 + 10 =18
4 - 4a, 4p, 4d, 4f = 2 + 6 + 10 + 14 = 32

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8
Q

How many orbitals in each shell?

A

1 - 1s orbital
2 - 1s, 3p orbitals
3 - 1s, 3p, 5d orbitals
4 - 1s, 3p, 5d, 7f orbitals

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9
Q

How many electrons can all orbitals hold?

A

2 electrons

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10
Q

Why do electron pairs have opposite spins?

A

Electrons are negatively charged and repel one another

The spins help counteract the repulsion between the negative charges of the electrons

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11
Q

In what order are orbitals filled?

A

One electron fills each each orbital before pairing starts(same energy level)
Prevents any repulsion between pairs until there are no further orbitals on that energy level

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12
Q

Which has a higher energy level, the 4s sub shell or the 3d sub shell?

A

The 3D sub shell, so it gets filled first

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13
Q

How would you write the shorthand notation for electron configuration?

A

Write symbol of a noble gas and write down the remaining configuration.

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14
Q

How do cations form?

A

Formed when atoms lose electrons

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15
Q

How do anions form?

A

When atoms gain electrons

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16
Q

What are common cations and anions?

A

Cations - metals, e.g Na+, Ca2+

Anions - non metals, e.g Cl-, 02-

18
Q

Where are each of the sub shells found in the periodic table?

A

S-block —> left hand block of the table
P-block —> right hand block of table
D-block —> transition metals block(centre of table)

19
Q

How to write configurations of ions

A

Cations - take away from natural config what the charge was

Anions - add on to natural config what charge was

20
Q

When does ionic bonding occur?

A

Between a metal and a non-metal

21
Q

What is an ionic bond

A

The electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions.
Held together in a lattice structure

22
Q

How would you visualise ionic bonds or compounds?

A

Dot and cross diagrams

23
Q

Structure of an ionic bond

A

Oppositely charged ions arranged in a giant ionic lattice structure
Each ion attracts oppositely charged ions in all directions

24
Q

Properties of ionic compounds

A

Solid at room temp/High MP/BP - strong electrostatic forces of attraction require more energy to break
Soluble in polar molecules - polar molecules able to break down the lattice and surround each ion in solution
Conduct electricity when dissolved or molten -
As a solid ions are in fixed positions, no mobile charge carriers
When molten or dissolved, ionic lattice breaks down, so ions are free to move as mobile charge carriers

25
Q

What is a covenant bond?

A

The strong electrostatic attraction between a shared pair of electrons and the nuclei of the bonded atoms

26
Q

Why can you only predict where an electron will be at any one time?

A

They are incredibly fast-moving,

depending on what orbital it is in, you can predict its shape and movement within it.

27
Q

Where does covalent bonding occur?

A

Between non-metallic elements
Compounds of non-metallic elements, e.g H20 and C02
Polyatomic ions, e.g NH4^+

28
Q

What are lone pairs?

A

Paired electrons that have not been shared/bonded with another atom

29
Q

What is a dative covalent bond.

A

When the shared lair of electrons in a covalent bond has been supplied by one atom only.