Unit 3- Bonding Flashcards

Ionic, covalent, IMF and metallic properties

1
Q

Ionic bonding

A
  • electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions
  • when electrons transfer from one atom to another they cause ions to form that are attracted to each other and form bonds
  • usually a metal (receiver) and non-metal (donor)
  • large structures hold ions in strong lattice structure with high boiling points
  • will conduct electricity when dissolved in water/molten
  • dissolve as slight negative dipole in water molecules pull them apart
  • e.g SO4 2-, OH-, NO3 -, CO3 2-, NH4+
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2
Q

Covalent Bonding

A
  • Overlap of electron orbitals as nuclei attract electrons from other atoms cause two atoms to share electrons
  • shape of molecule is changed
  • Bonds are strong between atoms, in small structures IMF is often very weak.
  • can have single double or triple, which can contain multiple pairs of electrons
  • carry no charge, do not dissolve
  • simple structures have low boiling points
  • macromolecular is stronger and has high boiling points
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3
Q

Dative bonding

A

A covalent bond where one atom donates both electrons in a pair. Shown as an arrow pointing from the donor to the other atom

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4
Q

Metallic Bonding

A
  • positive metal ions surrounded by de-localised electrons holding them in lattice structures
  • alows metal ions to move around within the sea of electrons, and allows formation of metal alloys
  • delocalised electrons conduct heat/electricity well
  • have high melting/boiling points due to strong electrostatic attraction, more electrons/ greater positive charge means more attraction
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5
Q

Van Der Waals IMF

A
  • hold together any non-polar simple molecules
  • caused by temporary uneven distribution of electrons within a sysmetrical molecules orbitals inducing an opposite distribution in nearby molecules, creating slight electrostatic attraction
  • strength of the induced temporary dipole is larger with greater size/more electrons
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6
Q

Electronegativity

A
  • an atoms ability to attract bonding electrons
  • decreases as you go down a group, or left along a period
  • atomic radius decreases along periods, increasing electronegativity
  • shielding increases down a group, decreasing electronegativity
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7
Q

Permanent Dipoles

A
  • permanent difference in the distribution of electrons in a molecules orbital
  • if the difference between electronegativity is greater or less than 0.5 a permanent dipole is induced with a bias towards the atom with greater electronegativity
  • symmetrical molecules cannot have permanent dipoles
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8
Q

Dip-Dip IMF

A
  • Electrostatic attraction between two molecules with a dipole
  • stronger than Van Der Waals
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9
Q

Hydrogen bonding IMF

A
  • electrostatic attraction between hydrogen ions and lone pairs
  • only in molecules with N-H,O-H or F-H
  • strongest IMF because attraction between lone pair and basically just a proton
  • increases boiling points of compound more than just a covalent bond
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10
Q

Crystal structure

A
  • ionic - sodium chloride, held together by electrostatic attraction
  • molecular - iodine, lowest melting point as held together by weak IMF
  • metallic - Magnesium, stronger if metal ion has greater positive charge
  • macromolecular - diamond, held together by strong covalent bonds
  • graphite is layers of macromolecular structured carbon held together by weak Van der Waals forces so they are easily separated
  • ice has a strong crystal structure due to the hydrogen bonding raising its melting point by more than a covalent bond would
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11
Q

Electron repulsion

A
  • bond pairs and lone pairs arrange themselves as far apart as possible to minimise repulsion
  • bond and lone pairs are clouds of charge, an area that can contain an electron
  • lone pairs repel more strongly than bond pairs
  • more pairs of electrons on an atom reduces the bond angle of a molecule
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