Honors Chemistry Chapters 7 and 8(and a small portion of Chapter 9) Notes

(Student’s edition)

Chapter 7 problem set:53, 60, 67, 73, 83

Chapter 8 problem set:40, 43, 45, 47, 54, 56, 58, 61, 63, 65-68, 74, 79, 80

Useful diagrams: This book has excellent figures and tables – most of them have something to offer you intellectually.

Start of Ch 9 Manipulating Polyatomic Ions and Naming Monatomic Ions (part of Ch9)

-Know the basic polyatomic ions:

Name / Formula / Name / Formula
Hydroxide / OH-1 / Nitrate / NO3-1
Ammonium / NH4+1 / Phosphate / PO4-3
Acetate / C2H3O2-1 / Chromate / CrO4-2
Carbonate / CO3-2 / Dichromate / Cr2O7-2
Sulfate / SO4-2 / Chlorate / ClO3-1
Permanganate / MnO4-1 / Oxalate / C2O4-2
Tartrate / C4H4O6-2 / Cyanide / CN-1

- Rule #1Change the number of oxygens:

remove one oxygen = change ending of name to ____

remove two oxygens = change ending of name to ____ and

beginning of name to ______

add one oxygen = change beginning of name to _____

Examples:

Name / Formula / Name / Formula / Name / Formula / Name / Formula
Chlorate / ClO3-1 / Sulfate / SO4-2 / Nitrate / NO3-1 / Phosphate / PO4-3
Chlorite / Sulfite / NO2-1 / PO3-3
Hypochlorite / Hyposulfite / NO-1 / PO2-3
Perchlorate / Persulfate / NO4-1 / PO5-3

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- Rule #2Other family members:

Elements near each other in the same column tend to form similar

polyatomic ions.

Examples:

Name / Formula / Name / Formula / Name / Formula
Chlorate / ClO3-1 / Sulfate / SO4-2 / Phosphate / PO4-3
Fluorate / Selenate / Arsenate
Iodate
Bromate

- Rule #3Add Hydrogen

Add only one H = change the beginning of the name to ____ and

make the charge one ____ negative (due to hydrogen’s

positive one charge)

Examples:

Name / Formula / Name / Formula
Carbonate / CO3-2 / Sulfate / SO4-2
Bicarbonate / HSO4-1

-Combine rules 1, 2, and 3

Examples:

Ex1: What is the formula for hypoiodite?

Find on the periodic table. It is near __. Chlorine forms

chlorate (______). Therefore, Iodine forms iodate (___).

The –ite and hypo- in hypoiodite mean that iodate has lost

______.

Hypoiodite =

Ex2: What is the formula for Biperselenate?

Find Se on the periodic table. It is near __. Sulfur forms

sulfate (____). Therefore, selenium forms selenate (____).

The per- in biperselenate means that selenate has gained

______. Also, the bi- means that it has gained a

______(don’t forget to change the ______!).

Biperselenate =

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-Monatomic Ions

For nonmetals, almost all single names that end with ____ indicates a single

charged atom.

Simply write the ______and the ______. The periodic table column indirectly

indicates the element’s ______. Remember, elements want to have __

electrons in their outer shell (______). For example, column #1 elements have a __ charge, column #2 elements have a __ charge, column

#3 = ___, column #5 = ___, column #6 = ___, and column #7 = ___.

Examples:

Ex1: What is the formula for chloride?

Ex2: What is the formula for an aluminum ion?

Ex3: What is the name of the S-2 anion?

Ex4: What is the name of the Mg+2 cation?

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NIB – an introduction: Attachment Between Atoms

-Most elements are not found in nature. They are

Chemical Bond -

.

-Types of chemical bonds:

Ionic -

Covalent -

Metallic -

8.4 Polar Bonds and Polar Molecules

-Polar -

-Nonpolar -

-There are two ways to predict polar vs nonpolar ( and covalent vs ionic)

#1 Use electronegativity difference

nonpolar covalent

0.4 - 1.7 - polar covalent

greater than 1.7 - ionic

Examples:

NaClHClCl2

Cl = Cl = Cl =

Na = H = Cl =

#2 - There is an easier way to predict

Ionic = or

Polar Covalent =

Nonpolar Covalent =

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7.1 and 7.2 Ions and Ionic bonds and Ionic Compounds

-Ionic compound - a substance composed of positive and neg. ions so that the charges

are . It involves a of electrons.

Ca+2 with Cl–1 will form the compound . It takes

chlorine ions to cancel out the the +2 charge on the calcium ion.

-Formula unit - lowest whole # ratio of ions

- Metals - electrons - why? They form cations

- Nonmetals - electrons - why? . They form anions

- Metals lose electrons until they become like a .

(usually 8 valence electrons)

-Nonmetals gain electrons until they do the same.

-Both go to s2p6 - valence electrons - called a

-The tendency to arrange electrons so each atom has 8 is called the .

-The formation of an ionic bond:

Na wants to ______

1s 2s 2p 3s

Cl wants to ______

1s 2s 2p 3s 3p

an easier way.....

-The ionic bonding picture looks like this....

Ex1: NatoCl

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-Other examples of ionic bonding pictures:

Ex2: BatoCl

Ex3: AltoN

Ex4: NatoS

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Ex5: Al toS

-Ions make up substances - not atoms

-Crystal Lattice - regular repeating pattern of in an ionic substance

-Ions are held in fixed position by .

-A amount of energy is needed to break this structure. Because of this, ionic compounds have a high .

-Ionics can’t conduct electricity as , but they can when dissolved in .

-Property summary of ionic compounds - hard, shatter (not ), conduct when in , high melting point, no smell (low )

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NIB(although this is covered somewhat in section 8.2)

-Energy is involved in all .

Na + Cl yields NaCl + 769 kJ

-Lattice energy - energy released when an forms.

NaCl = - 769 kJ/moleNaF = - 922 kJ/moleKCl = -718 kJ/mole

smaller ions have

7.3 Bonding in Metals

-“Sea of electrons theory”

-Properties of metals -

- Alloy - solution

- Amalgam - solution

-Alloys are important because they have properties that are better than the properties of

the .

8.1 and 8.2 Molecular Compounds and The Nature of Covalent Bonding

-Molecule - smallest quantity of matter that can exist by itself and still retain the

properties of that substance. Usually used when describing a covalently bonded substance.

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-monatomic molecules -

-diatomic molecules -

-polyatomic molecules -

-chemical formulas show the relative #’s of atoms in a chemical compound

ex.C6H12O6C = __, H = __, O =__

Pb(NO3)2Pb = __, N = __, O =__

(NH4)2Cr2O7 N = __, H = __, Cr = __, O =__

-The formation of a covalent bond: bond length

attraction

repulsion=

-Bond Length vs. Bond Energy

 Bond length = Bond Energy = Strength

-Diatomic Molecules and Orbital Notation (Orbital overlap or notation diagrams):

H2

1sThis is a bond.

1s

O2

1s 2s 2pThis is a bond.

1s 2s2p

N2

1s 2s 2pThis is a bond.

bond length

bond energy

1s 2s2p

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- Octet Rule-

______.

-Electron cloud representations (overlapping orbitals):

F2 HCl

______

- HF - orbital overlap diagram

H

1s

F

1s 2s2p

Dot Diagrams of molecules and polyatomic ions

-Lewis Structures for covalent compounds

-Basic rules (try to use as many as the rules as possible)

1. Each atom wants 8 electrons (except H wants 2).

2. Each atom goes for close to the right # of bonds.

3. The least electronegative atoms goes in the middle.

  1. The atom that makes the most bonds goes in the middle. H always on the outside.
  2. The single atom (the atom that does not have a subscript after it) goes in the middle.
  3. Attempt to make the structures as symmetrical as possible. Place the

atoms in order (left, right, bottom, and top) around a central atom.

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-Examples: Draw the following Lewis structures

Ex1:H2O

Ex2:PCl3

Ex3:SiH2F2

Ex4:CS2

Ex5:C2H6

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Ex6: C2H4

Ex7:C2H2

Ex8:CH2O

Ex9:HCN

Ex10:FON

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-Drawing polyatomic ions:

less bonds than atoms want = charge more bonds than atoms want = charge

Ex11: PO4-3

-coordinate covalent bond -

Ex12:NH4+

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Ex13:OH-1

Ex14:sulfate

Ex15: nitrate

Ex16:nitrite

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Ex17:carbonate

Ex18:bicarbonate

Ex19H2SO4

Ex20:H3PO4

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Exceptions to the Rule of 8

-Resonance - refers to bonding in molecules that be represented by Lewis

structure.

Ex1: SO2

Ex2: SO3

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-Originally it was thought that electrons in the second bond of a double bond “ ” back and forth between on both sides of the sulfur atom. Experiments show that each bond is equal so the electrons must be (another example is O3).

-Exceptions to the rule of 8

Group 13 - Boron is small - it can only accommodate 3 pairs of electrons.

For example, BH3 violates the octet rule:

Groups 15, 16, 17 can find themselves in “expanded” valence shells.

Expanded means that the shells hold more than 8 electrons.

examples:

SF6

PCl5

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XeF4

Some molecules have odd #’s of electrons

For example, NO has 15 total electrons and 11 valence electrons.

Also, NO2 has 17 valence electrons.

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-Related idea - Paramagnetism - atoms that interact weakly with a .

This results from electrons - magnetic fields cancel out from ______

spin of the electrons.

D block elements tend to be paramagnetic. These unpaired electrons also cause the coloring of these compounds.

Hybridization

-Carbon’s full electron configuration is:

Also, carbon’s orbital notation:

1s 2s2p

It looks like it wants to make 2 bonds. However, experiments show it makes 4 identical bonds.

-Hybridization - of atoms in a

chemical reaction.

Carbon will hybridize and have an electron configuration of:

These orbitals have different character than just “s” or just “p”.

They form a new type of orbital called the . Carbon has orbitals.

Carbon’s hybridized orbital notation:

Carbon combines with hydrogen to make methane CH4:

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Methane’s Lewis Structure:

also happens in Be:

1s 2s2p

after hybridization:

example - BeH2 - violates the octet rule - sp hybrid

BeH2 Lewis Structure:

also happens in B:

1s 2s2p

after hybridization:

example - BF3 - violates the octet rule - sp2 hybrid – draw the Lewis structure:

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8.3 and 8.4 Bonding Theories and Polar Bonds and Molecules

Shapes of Molecules - VSEPR Model

-Valence shell electron pair repulsion theory (vesper) -

Note: single bonds, double bonds, triple bonds, and non-bonding electron pairs

all equal one RHEDs (region of high electron density).

Example / RHEDs / Shape / Angle(s) and drawing
AB / 1 / Linear / A B
AB2 / 2 / Linear / B A B
AB3 / 3 / Triganal Planar / B

A
B B
AB4 / 4 / Tetrahedron
AB5 / 5 / Triganal Bipyramid
AB6 / 6 / Octahedron

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-Examples: Predict the shapes of the following (show all work):

Ex1:CCl4

Ex2:HBr

Ex3:SO3

Ex4:SO2

Ex5:H2S

Ex6: NH3

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Ex7:ClO4-1

Ex8:PF5

-dipole - when electrons are distributed

-Intermolecular forces(IMF)- forces that molecules together

- happens between compounds

- intermolecular forces - can be

-Intramolecular forces– bonds (ionic, covalent, metallic)

- happens within a molecule or compound

- always

……

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- dipole-dipole (the first type of IMF)

Ex1: predict the IMF that occurs with HCl

Ex2: predict the IMF that occurs with H2S

Hydrogen Bonding(the second type of IMF) H-bonding is a “super-duper” dipole-dipole

-Ex3:predict the IMF that occurs with HF

-Are we having FON? - H-bonding happens any time H is bonded to .

-Why? A large difference in between F, O, or N and H results in one

end of the molecule being very , while the other end is very .

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-Why N and not Cl? They have identical electronegativities!

Well, N is so much than Cl so the negative charge is spread over a smaller

area which exerts more force.

-Effect of H-bonds on physical properties:

H-bonding tends to cause the following in substances:

Boiling Point

Heat of Vaporization

Vapor Pressure

Melting Point

Also,

H-bonds causes water to when it freezes.

H-bonding is also responsible for the of proteins.

Molecular Substances

-We have learned that polar molecules have IMF holding them

together.

-We have learned about H-bonding or “super-duper” IMF.

-These two types of IMF usually result in substances being at room temp.

-A polar molecule has dipole-dipole or hydrogen bonding IMFs.

-Most nonpolar covalent substances are at room temp. as the forces holding them together are not enough to keep the molecules - hence they are .

-O2, H2, N2 - straight substances

-CO2 - have dipoles, but due to its molecular geometry

-now, a third type of IMF:

Van der Waals Forces (London Forces) -

Ex4: - CO2

more electrons = attraction

Thus, bigger atoms have Van der Waals forces

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Network Solids

-They are covalent or covalent .

-Examples:

-They form do not form , molecules. It is one continuous .

-Properties:

-They make good

NIB Summary - see, chemistry makes sense after all!

IMF / Molecule Type / Molecule / Boiling Pt. (Co)
London / Noble Gas / He / -269
London / Noble Gas / Ar / -186
London / Nonpolar / H2 / -253
London / Nonpolar / O2 / -183
London / Nonpolar / Cl2 / -34
H-bonding / Polar / HF / 19.5
Dipole-dipole / Polar / ICl / 97
Ionic / NaCl / 1413
Ionic / MgF2 / 2237
Metallic / Cu / 2567
Metallic / Fe / 2750

Bond Energy

- basic idea - what is the strength of chemical bonds?

-bond energy - energy needed to a bond - measured in kJ/mole

-bond strength and stability:

stronger bond - stable -needs more to break the bond

weaker bond - takes energy to break the bond so the chemical is

-chemical changes favor energy states - reactions are favored

NIB Bond Strength

- which is stronger? - single, double, or triple bond?

-which is shortest bond length? s, d, or t?

-which is stronger, short or long bonds?

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