Fluorine Facts
Ionic Bonding Basics
Lattices & Structures
Dissolving & Conductivity
Octet Rule & Stability
100

Fluorine has this many valence electrons

7

100

Metals do this with electrons to become positive ions

lose electrons

100

A lattice is a repeating 3D arrangement of these

ions

100

Water does this to ionic compounds, pulling ions apart 

dissociate them

100

Atoms bond to achieve this number of electrons in their outer shell

8

200

Fluorine is in this group on the periodic table

Group 7A

200
Nonmetals do this with electrons to become negative ions

gain electrons

200
Oppositely charged ions arrange themselves in the Mose stable pattern to form this

crystal lattice

200

A solution that contains free-moving ions is called this

electrolyte

200

This rule explains why atoms gain, lose, or share electrons 

octet rule

300

Two Fluorine atoms cannot form this type of bond because neither wants to lose an electron

An ionic bond

300

Ionic bonds form because these two types of ions attract each other

positive and negative ions

300

Table salt is an example of this type of structure

ionic lattice

300

A salt-water solution can do this because ions move toward electrodes

conduct electricity 

300

Covalent bonds form when atoms do this instead of transferring electrons

share electrons 

400

Instead of transferring electrons, two Fluorine atoms do this to form F2

share electrons 
400

This term describes the strong attraction between ions in an ionic compound

electrostatic force

400

Name one example of a lattice (from our study guide)

NaCl or MgO

400

In a conductivity model, a light bulb lights up when this happens 

ions complete the circuit

400

Ionic bonds form when electrons are transferred between these two types of elements

metals and nonmetals

500

Fluorine wants to gain exactly this many electrons to become stable

1

500

Group 1 metals lose this many electrons; Group 2 metals lose this many electrons

1 and 2

500

This force holds the lattice together 

electrostatic attractions

500

A solution conducts electricity only when these charged particles can move

ions

500

Atoms with almost full valence shells, like O and I, tend to do this

gain electrons 

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