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What is an ionic bond?
Cations and Anions are electrostatically attracted to eachother because of opposite charges, usually between a metal and non-metal.
Isoelectronic:
2 different species with the same electron configurations
What are the 2 main points about metals?
1. Have a low ionisation energy
2. Have a low electronegativity energy
What are the 2 main points about non-metals?
1. Have a high ionisation energy
2. Have a high electronegativity energy
When does an ionic bond form?
When the difference in electronegativity between the two reacting elements is greater than 1.8
What is electronegativity measured in?
Pauling Scale
What are 7 properties of ionic bonds?
1. Usually form crystalline structures
2. High melting and boiling points (non volitaile)
3. Doesn't conduct electricity in solid state
4. Hard
5. Brittle
6. Usually soluable
7. Can conduct electricity in liquid state
What does the structural property of having a 'hard surface' reveal about an ionic bond?
It means that the ions are held together strongly and are not able to move - thus making them resistant to physical change
What does the structural property of 'not being able to conduct electricity in a solid state' reveal about an ionic bond?
in an ionic lattice, the ions cannot move because they are fixed in a regular arrangement
when heated- lattice structure breaks down- bonds are weakend- ions can move
when dissolves- ions can move
Why is an ionic substance usually water soluble?
water molecules are polar
therefore they can squeeze in between the ions and disrupt the lattice
forming a hydration shell
why don’t all ionic compounds dissolve in water?
only those with an electrostatsic atttraction between the cations and anions WEAKER than the association between the ions and the partial charges of water molecules
What does the structural property of 'being brittle' reveal about an ionic bond?
An atom arrangement is fixed,
therefore when a force is applied the lattice will shift and like forces can come into contact
- resulting in the lattice shattering
What is the definition of the 'empirical formula'?
It is the smallest whole number ratio of cation to anion, when all charges are balanced
Binary ionic compound:
composed of a metal cation and a non-metal anion
Ammonium ion:
NH4+
Hydroxide ion:
OH-
Nitrate ion:
NO3–
Hydrogen carbonate:
HCO3–
Sulfate:
SO42–
Phosphate:
PO43–
Carbonate:
CO32–
Redox reaction equations for 2Na+ Cl2 → 2NaCl
2Na → 2Na+ +2e-
Cl2 + 2e- → 2Cl-
Transition element:
an elemnt with a partially filled D sublevel
these can form multiple ions with different charges
Lattice Enthalpy:
the standard enthalpy change that ocucrs on the formation of gaseous ions from one mole of the solid lattice
how strong the ionic bonds are in particular ionic lattice
if the lattice enthalpy is postive the reaction is…
endothermic
Factors that affect lattice enthalpy:
increases with ionic charge
decrases with ionic radius
What are the solubility rules?
SPAN: Sodium, Potassium, Nitrate and Ammonium SOLUBLE
Chlorided SOLUBLE…except Silver and Lead(II)
Sulphates SOLUBLE…except Barium, Calcium and Lead (II)
Carbonates INSOLUBLE
Hydroxides INSOLUBLE…Calcium slightly…
covalent bond
electrostatic force of attraction between one or more pairs of shared electrons and positively charged nuclei
covalent bonding occurs between...
non-metals
Covalent bonding and Voltility:
Covalent network: solids are RTP- vapourising them requires lots of energy as strong copvalent bonds
Covalent molecular: weak intermolecular forces that can be easily overcome- generally volitaile
octet rule
the tendency of atoms to gain a valence shell with a total of eight electrons
Lewis diagram
two-dimensional diagram of an atom where the valence shell electrons are represented as dots/crosses and covalent bonds are shown, don't show geometric shape
structural diagram
non-polar covalent bonds occur when...
two atoms have the exact same electronegativity
polar covalent bonds occur when...
two atoms have different electronegativity
partial charge
when one atom has a higher electronegativity so draws the electron pair closer to its nucleus
the charge of non-bonding (lone) electron pairs is always...
partially negative
bond length
measure of the distance between two bonded nuclei
bond strength
measure of the energy required to break the bond (in terms of bond enthalpy)
as bond length increases...
bond strength decreases (bond enthalpy goes down)
as bond length decreases...
bond strength increases (bond enthalpy goes up)
as we go down a group and the atomic radius increases, bond length should... and why?
bond length increases as there are more electron shells
having multiple covalent bonds will mean that bond lengths ... and bond strength ...
bond length decreases and bond strength (enthalpy) increases
dative covalent bond
covalent bond formed between two atoms, only one of which has provided electrons for the bond
in dative bonds (coordinate bonds), the arrow that represents the bond points towards the ...
atom accepting electrons (beneficiary)
the exceptions to the octet rule are... (incomplete octet)
beryllium (4 outer shell electrons) and boron (6 outer shell electrons)
electron domain
location of a pair or several pairs of electrons (charge centres)
the shape of the covalent molecule is determined by...
the number of electron domains
VSEPR theory states...
electron pairs in the same valence shell carry the same charge, so they repel and spread themselves out as far as possible away from each other in a three-dimensional sense
two electron domains results in...
linear shape (180°)
three electron domains with one lone pair...
bent/V-shaped (117.5°)
three electron domains results in...
trigonal planar shape (120°)
four bonded electron domains results in...
tetrahedral shape (109.5°)
four electron domains with one lone pair...
trigonal pyramid (107°)
four electron domains with two lone pairs...
bent/V-shaped (105°)
5 electron domains no lone pairs
triogonal bipyramidal 120 and 90
5 electron domains with 1 lone pair
seesaw 117.5 and 87.5
5 electron domains with 2 lone pairs
T-shape 87.5
5 electron domains with 3 lone pairs
Linear 180
6 electron domains with no lone pairs
Octahedral 90
6 electron domains with 1 lone pair
square pyramid 87.5
6 electron domains with 2 lone pairs
square planar 90
6 electron domains with 3 lone pairs
T-shape 87.5
6 electron domains with 4 lone pairs
Linear 180
a dipole molecule must satisfy these two conditions...
polar covalent bonds and asymmetrical distribution of charge
the order of strength of repulsion in electron pairs is...(from strongest to weakest)
lone-lone, bonded-lone, bonded-bonded
intramolecular bonds occur...
within the molecule
intermolecular bonds occur...
between molecules
the three types of intermolecular forces are...
London dispersion forces,dipole induced, dipole-dipole attractions and hydrogen bonds
Van de Waal's forces is a blanket term that refers to...
London dispersion forces and dipole-dipole attraction
London dispersion forces
generated by temporary or instantaneous dipoles through the random movement of electrons, present in all, most significant in non-polar
strength of London dispersion forces
weakest type of intermolecular force
London dispersion forces increase when...
the number of electrons increase (not dependant on only valence electrons)
Larger molecular size means…
More electrons → greater polarisability → stronger London Dispersion forces → more energy needed to overcome IMFs → higher boiling point
dipole-dipole attraction
attraction of two polar molecules to each other, one positive end of a molecule is attracted to the negative end of another
strength of dipole-dipole attractions
stronger than London dispersion forces, weaker than hydrogen bonds
Hydrogen bonding
combination of fluorine, oxygen or nitrogen with hydrogen (special kind of strong dipole attraction)
Solubility of covalent molecules
Intermolecular hydrogen bonds can only form if there are...
intramolecular hydrogen bonds already existent
molecules containing two atoms are described as...
diatomic
molecules containing three atoms are described as...
triatomic
bond polarity can be calculated by...
comparing the difference in the electronegativity of the two atoms, greater difference = increased polarity
net dipole moment
the overall direction that the electrons are being pulled in
Allotrope:
diff molecular arrangements of the same element in the same physical state
Diamonds structure?
4 covalent bonds each
tetrahedral
109.5
giant lattice
hard: drills + glass cutters
Graphite structure:
3 bonds each
graphene layers
held together by weak Intermolecular Van der waals forces
120
spare e = delocalised= conductor of electricity
Brittle
Buckminster fullerene 60:
3 bonds each
109 and 120
spare e delocalised
drug delivery
Silicon structure:
4 bonds each sillicon
tetrahedral
109.5
giant lattice
Formal change=
valence electrons -non bonding e - ½ bonding e.
Benzene carbon hybridisation and why?
sp2 because 3 domains (1 H, 1C , 2C)
Pi system?
2 ring shaped clouds of electron density above and below the plane of benzene caused by the extensive sideways overlaps of P orbitals
allows delocalised elctrons
Benzene shape and bond
hexagonal planar and 1120
Evidence for delocalisation in benzene?
enthalpy changes of hydrogeneration
cyclohexene hydrogeneration = -120, so Benzene = -360 as 3 = bonds BUT actually is -208 so more stable than model
Carbon-carbon bond lengths
you would think between 154 and 134 but actually all equal 140 pm so bond order is 1.5
Saturation test
cyclohexene decolourises bromine water as an electrophyllic reaction takes places so it should w benzene but doesnt = no double bonds
Infrared spec
benzene doesnt show peak for c=c
Paper chromatograpghy:
blots on paper alligned with solvent level
solvent moves up by capillary action, dissolves the substances seperating the components and moving them up
How is paper chromatograpghy optimised:
a lid can be placed on top of the beaker to prevent solvent loss by evaporation
paper with hydrated cellulose used- has mnay -OH groups - polar- form water layer on paper
can be combined with less polar iganic solvent to partition mixture components
seperates leaf pigments or amino acid mixtures
Thin Layer Chromatograpghy:
Stationary phase: rectangular SiO2/ Al2O3 coated plate
very polar surfaces- placed in non-polar solvent
Polar substances absorob onto Silica/Alumina
Non-polar substances move up by dissolving in the solvent
Rf value
distance by spot/ distance by solvent
What is metallic bonding?
Electrostatic attraction between delocalised free moving electrons and the positively charged metal ions.
Characteristics of a metal?
low relative electronegativity
great conductor of heat and electricity
lustrous
sonorous
high MP BP
malleable + ductile
tends to corrode
Why is metal malleable?
metallic bonds are non directional (uniform charge across the structure as electrons as electrons are shared across multiple atoms in all directions)
this allows layers of cations to slide past each other rearranging the shape of the lattice
without breaking the electrostatic attaction