ionic bonding
melting point, boiling point etc
covalent bonding
van deer waals forces
old chemistry topics and concepts
100

1. What is an ionic bond?

2. What is the rule about who will attract or gain electrons?

3. Define cation and anion

1. An ionic bond is a chemical bond formed through the electrostatic attraction between OPPOSITELY CHARGED IONs. (bond created when one atom transfers one or more electrons to another atom)

2. Elements with higher e-negs are more likely to attract electrons (anion) whereas atoms with lower e-negs are likely to give them away (cation)

3. Cation = positively charged ion, loses e- 

Anion = negatively charged ions, gains e-

100
1. what two factors affect the melting point and why?

1. Atomic radius - the smaller the radius, the higher the boiling point because small ions are closer together which means more attraction. more attraction =  more energy need to separate the ions.

2. Ionic charge - the higher the charge, the higher the melting point because higher charge = more electrostatic attraction


100

what is polar covalent bond?

a non-metal unequally shares electrons w/ another non-metal. the atom with the higher e-neg value attracts the electron more than the atom with the lower e-neg value

100

1.) what is LDF, dipole dipole, and hydrogen bonding? How is boiling/ melting point related to imf?

1. ldf = temporary dipoles, very weak, lower melting/boiling point

dipole dipole = a dipole, no hydrogen bonding, medium strength 

hydrogen bonding = dipole attached to hydrogen, oxygen or fluorine, srongest imf, higher melting / boiling point

100

Describe the following separation techniques:

Distillation                     Paper chromatography

Filtration            Solvation

Recrystallization

Evaporation

Distillation: Separating liquids by boiling point

Paper chromatography: separates soluble colored substances based on how fast they move through paper.

Filtration: solid from liquid         Solvation: 

 solute dissolves in a solvent, allowing certain substances to be separated based on solubility

Recrystallization: solid compound dissolve in hot solvent and then cooling, pure crystals form while impurities remain

Evaporation: solid from liquid by heating the liquid

200
1. What is something to remember what charges elements will have based on periodic table?


2. How do you write equations between oppositely charged ions?

1. Group 1-13 form positive ions. Group 13-17 form negative ions

2. You balance the charges, then you balance the overall equation.

200

1. How does atomic radius increase and decrease, and WHY?

2. What is nuclear charge and how does it increase and why?

1. Atomic radius increases down a group due to added electron shells. It decreases across a period due to increasing nuclear charge.

2. Nuclear charge is the total positive charge of an atom's nuclear, determined by its number of protons.

increases from left to right due to added protons without increased shielding



200

what are exceptions in lewis dot structure?


2. What is a coordinate covalent bond

group 13 are exceptions, happy with six and not a full octet

period 3 and beyond can have more than 8 electrons in their valence shell

2. A coordinate covalent is when both of the shared electrons come from only one of the atoms involved in the bond rather than 1 electron from both


200

electrical conductivity of ionic bonds, covalent bonds, and metal

ionic compounds easily conduct electricity 


covalent compounds do not contain ions and will not usually conduct electricity unless in some cases like acid and base

 all metals conduct electricity due to their atomic structure, which features a "sea" of free, delocalized electrons that move easily through the metal's lattice. These free electrons, often valence electrons, can carry charge, making metals excellent conductors.

200

describe allotrope diamond 

Diamond

tetrahedral 109.5 degrees

  • Melting point: Very high (above 3500°C)
  • Appearance: Clear, shiny crystals
  • Strength: Extremely hard (hardest natural substance)
  • Heat conductivity: Very good
  • Electrical conductivity: Does not conduct electricity
300
what is the name and charge of the following polyatomic ions?


NH4     SO3           OH       C2H3O2 

NO2       SO4        PO4       HCO3

NO3        CO3      CN        MnO4


NH4: +1, Ammonium

SO3: -2 Sulfite        OH: -1 Hydroxide      

 C2H3O2: -1 Acetate 

NO2: -1 Nitrite     SO4: -2 Sulfate   PO4: -3 Phosphate 

 HCO3: -1 Hydrogen carbonate 

NO3: -1 Nitrate      CO3:-2 Carbonate

 CN: Cyanide -1       MnO4: Permangranate -1 

300

1. what happens to a lattice structure when placed in water?

1. Dissolution (breaking apart of the lattice) seperated and dispersing througout the water due to water's polarity

2. Each ion gets surrounded by water molecules in a process called hydration, stabilizing them in the solution.

3. Overall process either releases or absorbs heat. 

lattice energy greater than hydration = endothermic

lattice energy lower than hydration = exothermic


300

Write the angle and details for each of these shapes?

Linear                        Tetrahedral 

  Trigonal pyrmamidal

Trigonal planar                 Bent 2

Bent 

Tetrahedral

Linear- 180 degrees, 2 bonds no lone pairs         

  Trigonal pyrmamidal - 107.5 degrees, bonded to 3, 1 lone pair

Trigonal planar- 120 degrees, bonded to 3, no lone pair

Bent- 118 degrees, bonded to 2 elements, 1 lone pair

Tetrahedral- 109.5 degrees, bonded to 4, no lone pair

Bent 2 - 105.5 degrees, bonded to 2 elements, 2 lone pairs

300

where are metals?

1. metallic bonding - metal atoms release electrons into a "sea" that holds the metal together

they are left/ center of periodic table, have luster, conduct heat/ electricity, are malleable and lose electrons to form cations

300

describe allotrope graphite 

Graphite: 

Trigonal planar - 120 degrees 

Melting point: Very high (above 3500°C)

  • Appearance: Black or dark grey, dull
  • Strength: Soft and weak (layers slide easily)
  • Heat conductivity: Good
  • Electrical conductivity: Good conductor

Graphite has layers of carbon atoms, which is why it is used in pencils.

400
1. What is the name of the structure for ionic bonds and how is it drawn?

2. What is a coordination number?

1. It is called  a lattice structure. The big circles are the negative ions, and the smaller circles are the positive ion.

2. A coordination number is the number of neighboring ions of opposite charge surrounding a single ion (2,4, 6)

400

what is a covalent bond?

a covalemnt bond is when a non-metal shares electrons with another non-meta to achieve an octet (like a noble gaS)

the shared eelctrons are held between the nuclei and attracts both atoms using electrostatic attraction

400

what is the difference in e-neg and what does it indicate?

0 - 0.4 = covalent

0.4 - 1.6 = polar covalent

1.6+ = ionic 


400
what two forces affect metallic bonding and why?
1. attraction or repulsion between the positively charged metal ions (cations) and delocalized electron


2. The charge of the metal : the greater the charge, higher the strength

2. Radius of the cation: the smaller, the greater the strength

400

describe allotrope fullerene

Spherical 

2 single bonds in petagons (180 degrees) or double bond 120 degrees in hexagons

  • Melting point: High
  • Appearance: Dark, molecular solid (not shiny)
  • Strength: Strong but lightweight
  • Heat conductivity: Low
  • Electrical conductivity: Poor to moderate


500

How do you describe a lattice structure?

1. State the coordination number (opppositely charged), mention that each ion is surrounded by many surrounding ions

2. Mention the 3D repeating lattice (repeats in 3 dimensions)

3. Connect it to stability: maximizes electrostatic attraction resulting in a stable ionic structure

500

describe a single bond vs a triple bond

A single bond (2 electrons, 1 pair) Weakest strength, longest length, less reactive

A triple bond (less bonds) is 6 electrons, strongest bond length, highest energy, most reactive


Bond length lowers with increased bonds, bond strength increases with more bonds

500

what is symmetry and how does it affect bond dipoles


if the molecule is symmetrical and the bond angles are equal and opposite, they cancel and the molecule is non polar

500

describe PV=nrt, what conversion should they be in

P= pressure, kpa 101 kpa = 1 atm

V= volume, liters

n= mols, n

r= gas constant, 0.0821

T= temperature, kelvin 0 degrees celsius + 273 K

500

describe allotrope graphene

2-D sheet 

120 degrees 

  • Melting point: Very high
  • Appearance: Transparent, one‑atom‑thick sheet
  • Strength: Extremely strong
  • Heat conductivity: Excellent
  • Electrical conductivity: Excellent
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