Covalent Bonding and Summary

Description

Note on Covalent Bonding and Summary, created by connorbooth on 08/06/2015.
connorbooth
Note by connorbooth, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
ShreyaDas
Created by ShreyaDas almost 9 years ago
connorbooth
Copied by connorbooth almost 9 years ago
0
0

Resource summary

Page 1

when two or more non-metal atoms react together, they ened to gain electrons to reach full shells- can only manage this by sharing electronsin diagrams only outer shells are shown

two hydrogen atoms share one electron eachbonded atoms form a molecule

ionic bonding = metal and non-metal bondingcovalent bonding = non-metals bonding

Diatomic MoleculesBr, I, N, Cl, H, O, F(Brinklehoff)Bromine, Iodine, Nitrogen, Chlorine, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine

double covalent bond: when atoms are sharing two pairs of electrons

In molecular compounds, atoms of different elements share electrons with each other- called covalent compounds (covalent bonds)

Examples:- water (H2O)- ammonia- methane

mus

must have two electrons in a single covalent bond

Properties of Ionic Compounds:- usually solids at room temperature- high melting points --> strong electrostatic forces holding the crystal lattice together- a lot of energy is needed to separate the ions and melt the substance- usually hard substances- usually cannot conduct electricity- usually cannot conduct electricity when solid (ions are not free to move)- dissolve in water (atoms of water bond with positive and negative and break the bonds)- conduct electricity when in the molten state or in aqueous solution (forces of attraction between ions are weakened)- not volatile

Properties of Covalent Compounds: - - low melting and boiling points- weak intermolecular forces of attraction which exist between simple molecules- giant molecular substances have higher melting points (strong covalent bonds)- do not conduct electricity in molten state or dissolved in water- do not contain ions- some moleculles react with water to produce ions (hydrogen chloride + water = hydrogen and chloride ions- generally do not dissolve in water- more volatile

Volatility = measure of the tendency of a substance to vaporize- low boiling point

Sili

Silicon dioxideDiamondGraphite

atoms are joined together by covalent bonds in a massive network

Simple molecular structures are:- simple- formed from only a few atoms- strong covalent bonds between atoms with a molecule (intramolecular bonds)- weak bonds between molecules (intermolecular bonds_

SiO2 is a giant structure where each silicon atom forms covalent bonds with four oxygen atomseach oxygen atom has two bonds

Definition: different physical forms of the same element

Graphite: only 3 of the electrons in its outer shell are covalently bonded- one delocalised (spare) electron makes electron clouds between the layers of other electrons = conducts electricity- layers have weak forces of attraction = pass over each other easily

Diamond:- four strong covalent bonds = does not conduct electricity, has a high melting point, is the hardest known substance- giant covalent structure

mono = 1dio - 2tri = 3tetra = 4Mass = molar mass/number of moles

Covalent Bonding

Covalent Compounds

Giant Covalent Structure - macromolecular

Allotropes

Summary

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Introduction and Ionic Bonding
ShreyaDas
Using GoConqr to study science
Sarah Egan
Electrolysis
lisawinkler10
Acids and Bases
silviaod119
Elements, Compounds and Mixtures
silviaod119
Chemistry General Quiz - 2
lauren_johncock
Chemistry Quiz General -3
lauren_johncock
Chemistry Module C2: Material Choices
James McConnell
AS Chemistry - Enthalpy Changes
Sarah H-V
The Periodic Table
asramanathan
Introduction to the Atom
Derek Cumberbatch