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PUTTING ATOMS TOGETHER Chapter 7

Putting Atoms Together

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Putting Atoms Together. Chapter 7. Terminology. two or more atoms of the same or different elements that are chemically joined together in a unit. . Molecule – Ex . Air = roughly 80% _______________ molecules, _____ oxygen molecules, and trace amounts of H 2 O and CO 2. nitrogen. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Putting  Atoms Together

PUTTING ATOMS TOGETHERChapter 7

Page 2: Putting  Atoms Together

TERMINOLOGYMolecule –

• Ex. Air = roughly 80% _______________ molecules, _____ oxygen molecules, and trace amounts of H2O and CO2

nitrogen 20%

two or more atoms of the same or different elements that are chemically joined together in a unit.

Page 3: Putting  Atoms Together

TERMINOLOGY

Chemical Formula –

• - small numbers written ____________, in chemistry usually indicates a charge • – small number ___________, tells us how many atoms there are

Diatomic Elements –

notation that indicates the type and number of atoms in a pure substance

Subscript

Superscript Mg2+

O2 = 2 oxygen atoms

above/after

below/after

Elements that exist as molecular elements consisting of 2 atoms.

Page 4: Putting  Atoms Together

* 7

Page 5: Putting  Atoms Together

MOLECULAR COMPOUNDSSharing is caring!

Page 6: Putting  Atoms Together

TERMINOLOGYMolecular Compounds – Compound consisting of two or more different elements with neutral charges that are bonded together. • Involves two _______________

(includes hydrogen) elements joining together and sharing their ________ electrons to fill their outer __________________ (shell).

non-metal

valenceenergy level

A simulation of the reaction: 2H2 + O2   ®    2H2O  

What do we call rxn’s that release energy/heat? What do we call rxn’s that require it?  

Page 7: Putting  Atoms Together

Illustration to the right shows two __________ molecules and a single _______ molecule. Hydrogen wants to have a full ________ shell (first shell can hold a max. of __) meanwhile the oxygen atom also wants to have a full valence shell (2nd shell can hold __). Therefore a ____________________ occurs.

hydrogen

oxygen

valence

8

2

sharing of electrons

2 H + 1 O H2O

Means electrons “LEAN” or migrate towards one molecule creating partial + and - charges

Forces that hold atoms together

Represent “potential” energy

Page 8: Putting  Atoms Together

A key aspect of molecular compounds is the fact they are ______________________ ____ ____________________. Only certain combinations in __________ _______________________ are found in nature. Ex.

•The above example highlights the fact that a change in ______________________________________ dramatically changes the ______________________________________________

dependent on arrangementfixed amounts

O2 = Oxygen Gas, meanwhile O3 = Ozone

configuration compound and how it affects us.

Page 9: Putting  Atoms Together

These molecules can be drawn as

__________________________________________ diagrams or as

____________________________________ with the shared pair of electrons

represented by a _____, 2 pairs by a ______, or 3 sets of shared

electrons by _____. The most that will ever be shared is 3.

Bohr-RutherfordLewis dot diagrams

Page 10: Putting  Atoms Together

IONIC COMPOUNDS

Page 11: Putting  Atoms Together

TERMINOLOGY

•Def.

• Involves a ___________ + a _____________ joining together, with the metal _____________ its ___________ _________ and the __________ taking them.

Def. Ion –_________________________________ 2 forms 1.) _________ = Positive 2.) _________ = Negative

Compound consisting of a positively charged (cation) and negatively charged (anion) ion.

metal giving away valence

electrons

non-metal

non-metal

a particle that has a + or - chargeCation Anion

Page 12: Putting  Atoms Together

WHY DOES THE METAL ALWAYS GIVE AWAY ITS VALENCE ELECTRONS AND THE NON-

METAL ALWAYS TAKE THEM?

•Think about this silently (use your notes or textbook as a reference)

Page 13: Putting  Atoms Together

ANSWER• It is easier for a metal to give up 3 or 4 electrons than try to take enough to fill its valence shell.

•For non-metals, they generally only need 1 or 2 extra’s to fill their shells, so it is easier for them to take 2 than give up 6.

Page 14: Putting  Atoms Together

  Sodium Atom, Na

Sodium Ion, Na+

Chlorine Ion, Cl-

Chlorine Atom, Cl

+ Charge (Protons)

       

- Charge (Electron)

       

Ionic charge        

Page 15: Putting  Atoms Together

DRAW DIAGRAM FROM TEXT(pg. 260)

• Copy the Bohr-Rutherford

• Create a Lewis Dot Diagram

Page 16: Putting  Atoms Together

Sodium Ion, Na+ Chlorine Ion, Cl-

Page 17: Putting  Atoms Together

HW Q 1-8 on page 261

Page 18: Putting  Atoms Together

PERIODIC TABLE WORKSHEET

REVIEW

Page 19: Putting  Atoms Together

1. _______ are located on the left side of the periodic table, with __________ located on the right side. They are separated by a “________” that touches the __________.

2. Horizontal rows are known as ________ and tell us the number of ______ _____ or ______ an element has.

Metals non-metals

staircasemetalloids

periodsEnergy levels shells

Page 20: Putting  Atoms Together

3. ________ or groups are vertical ________ on the periodic table and tell us how many valence _________ an element has.

4. ATOMS have the same number of Protons as they do ______ _______, so their charge is neutral, this information is detailed in the ______.

Families columns

electrons

atomic numbercharge

Page 21: Putting  Atoms Together

5. IONS have a positive or negative _______ because they have given up their _______ _________ or taken valence electrons from an atom of another element in order to fill/empty their outer energy shell.

6. Positive ions are known as _______ (think the t looks like a +) while negative ions are called _______ (has two n’s for negative).

chargevalence electrons

cationsanions

Page 22: Putting  Atoms Together

MAGNESIUM ATOM• Symbol = • Period # = •# of energy levels = •Group # = •# of Valence Electrons =•Member of the _____________ Family •Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 23: Putting  Atoms Together

LITHIUM ATOM• Symbol = • Period # = •# of energy levels = •Group # = •# of Valence Electrons =•Member of the _____________ Family •Draw a Lewis-Dot Diagram

Page 24: Putting  Atoms Together

ARGON ATOM• Symbol = • Period # = •# of energy levels = •Group # = •# of Valence Electrons =•Member of the _____________ Family•Number of Neutrons = •Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 25: Putting  Atoms Together

FLUORINE ATOM• Symbol = • Period # = •# of energy levels = •Group # = •# of Valence Electrons =•Member of the _____________ Family•Number of Neutrons = •Draw a Lewis Dot diagram

Page 26: Putting  Atoms Together

ION REVIEW a) An ION of fluorine is going to mimic (look like) an atom of ______.

b) An ION of beryllium is going to mimic an atom of __________________.

c) An ION of ____________ has to gain 3 electrons to mimic argon. Its ionic charge will be ____.

Neon

Helium

phosphorus-3

Page 27: Putting  Atoms Together

d) An ION of _________ has to give up 3 electrons in order to mimic an atom of neon. Its charge will be ___.

e) An Ion of Oxygen has to ____ ___ electrons to mimic _____. Its ionic charge will be ___.

gain 2-2neon

Aluminum

+3

Page 28: Putting  Atoms Together

CALCIUM ATOM• Symbol = • Atomic # = • # of Protons = • # of Electrons = • Ionic Charge = • Atomic Mass = • Number of Neutrons = • Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 29: Putting  Atoms Together

OXYGEN ION• Symbol = • Atomic # = • # of Protons = • # of Electrons = • Ionic Charge = • Atomic Mass = • Number of Neutrons = • Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 30: Putting  Atoms Together

CHLORINE ION• Symbol = • Atomic # = • # of Protons = • # of Electrons = • Ionic Charge = • Atomic Mass = • Number of Neutrons = • Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 31: Putting  Atoms Together

ALUMINUM ION• Symbol = • Atomic # = • # of Protons = • # of Electrons = • Ionic Charge = • Atomic Mass = • Number of Neutrons = • Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 32: Putting  Atoms Together

POTASSIUM ION• Symbol = • Atomic # = • # of Protons = • # of Electrons = • Ionic Charge = • Atomic Mass = • Number of Neutrons = • Draw a Bohr-Rutherford Diagram

Page 33: Putting  Atoms Together

QUESTIONS FROM READING• How do atoms become more stable? • When metals mix with another metal is it called an

________. • When metals mix with non-metals it is called an

__________ compound.• What happens with the electrons in these compounds?

• When two non-metals mix it is called an ____________ compound. • What happens with the electrons in these compounds?

Page 34: Putting  Atoms Together

IONIC COMPOUNDSNames & Formulas

Page 35: Putting  Atoms Together

REVIEW

•Def.

• Involves a ___________ + a _____________ joining together, with the metal _____________ its ___________ _________ and the __________ taking them.

Def. Ion –_________________________________ 2 forms 1.) _________ = Positive 2.) _________ = Negative

Compound consisting of a positively charged (cation) and negatively charged (anion) ion.

metal giving away valence

electrons

non-metal

non-metal

a particle that has a + or - chargeCation Anion

Page 36: Putting  Atoms Together

NAMINGIonic compounds are easily identified by the presence of a ___________ (first term). Any time you see a metal as the first term, you should automatically be thinking IONIC! Additionally, there is never a __________________ reference in the compound name (so no _________________). The nice thing about naming Ionic molecules is we __________ need to worry about numbers (subscripts).

metal

NUMERICAL

PREFIXESDO NOT

Page 37: Putting  Atoms Together

1)Determine how many elements (each capital letter represents a new element) are present in the compound (_______) and locate them on the periodic table. Is there a metal..? If so it must be a Ionic Compound.

2) Identify which of the elements is the metal (it must go first). __________________

3) Identify the non-metal element (it goes 2nd). ____________________

4) Write the name of the metal, than the name of the non-metal (but change the ending of the non-metal to “IDE”). ___________ _____________

Example K2O

2

Potassium

Oxygen

Potassium ox”ide’

Page 38: Putting  Atoms Together

Try these…

Li2O MgF2 NaCl K3N       

CaS Be3P2 LiBr Na2O       

Lithium oxide Magnesium flouride

Berylium phosphideCalcium sulphide

Sodium chloride

Lithium bromide

Potassium nitride

Sodium oxide

Page 39: Putting  Atoms Together

WRITING CHEMICAL FORMULAS FOR IONIC COMPOUNDS

Since the electrons are ____________ and electrical _______ are present we need to reference the Periodic Table in order to determine how many of each element there is going to be. ____________________________!

given/taken charges

THE CHARGES MUST BALANCE

Page 40: Putting  Atoms Together

Step 1: Locate the elements in the Periodic Table- ensure one is a metal, and one is a non-metal. Write down their chemical symbol.

Step 2: Determine the “charge” each element carries when its forms an ionic bond (remember: STABLE)

Step 3: Backcross the “charges“ to SUBSCRIPTS for each elementEx. Rubidiumfluoride

“charges it up” _____ _____ “backcross it down” Rb2O1

Rb O+1 -2

Rb O+1 -2

Page 41: Putting  Atoms Together

Compound

Sodium chloride

Magnesium nitride

Calcium fluoride

Francium phosphide

CHARGE       

FORMULA       

Na+1 Cl-1

NaCl

Mg+2 N-3

Mg3N2

Ca+2 F-1

CaF2 Fr3P

Fr+1 P-3