Types of Bonds
Naming Compounds
Molecular Geometry
Intermolecular Forces
Phases & Solubility
100

This type of bond involves the transfer of electrons between atoms.

ionic bond

100

The suffix “-ide” is used for this part of an ionic compound’s name.

anion

100

The shape of CH₄ according to VSEPR theory.

tetrahedral

100

The weakest type of intermolecular force, found in all molecules.

London dispersion forces

100

The point on a phase diagram where all three states coexist.


triple point

200

In a metallic bond, positive metal ions are surrounded by this “sea.”

delocalized electrons

200

What is the correct name for FeCl₃?

iron(III) chloride

200

A molecule with two bonding pairs and two lone pairs (like H₂O) has this molecular shape.

bent

200

Hydrogen bonding occurs only when H is bonded to these elements.

N, O, or F

200

“Like dissolves like” means that polar solutes dissolve best in this kind of solvent.

polar solvent

300

These bonds form between two nonmetals that share electrons.

covalent bond

300

Name the compound N₂O₄.

dinitrogen tetroxide

300

A molecule with five bonding pairs and one lone pair, like BrF₅, has this geometry.



square pyramidal

300

This IMF is responsible for water’s unusually high boiling point.

hydrogen bonding

300

The point where the liquid and gas phases become indistinguishable.

critical point

400

Name one property that distinguishes ionic compounds from covalent compounds.

high melting points / brittleness / electrical conductivity

400

What is the formula for calcium nitrate?

Ca(NO₃)₂

400

The total number of electron domains determines this geometry type.

electron geometry

400

Rank these by strength: hydrogen bond, dipole-dipole, London dispersion.

LDF < dipole-dipole < hydrogen bond

400

Between n-hexane and 2-methylpentane, which has the higher boiling point and why?

n-hexane, because it has more surface area and stronger LDFs.

500

Arrange the following by increasing bond strength: metallic, ionic, covalent.

metallic < covalent < ionic

500

Why do some transition metals require Roman numerals in their names?

Because they can form more than one possible charge.

500

Describe the difference between electron geometry and molecular geometry.

Electron geometry considers all electron domains; molecular geometry considers only bonded atoms.

500

Explain why ethanol (CH₃CH₂OH) has a higher boiling point than dimethyl ether (CH₃OCH₃).

Ethanol can form hydrogen bonds; dimethyl ether cannot.

500

Explain why O₂ can dissolve in water even though it’s nonpolar.

Because a dipole-induced dipole interaction allows temporary polarity in O₂.