
Ionic, covalent and giant covalent compounds
Presentation
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Chemistry, Science
•
9th - 11th Grade
•
Medium
+2
Standards-aligned
Angela Thornsberry
Used 36+ times
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8 Slides • 12 Questions
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Ionic, covalent and giant covalent compounds
By Angela Thornsberry
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Forms crystals
Hard and brittle
High melting point
Don't conduct as solid, but can conduct electricty when dissolved in water
Often water soluble
Properties of Ionic Compounds:
Formed by a metal and nonmetal.
Metal loses electrons (+, cation).
Nonmetal gains electrons (-, anoion).
Opposite charges are attracted forming a bond.
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Positive metal ions are attracted to surrounding nonmetal ions, allowing crystals to form.
A crystal is a solid material in which the atoms are arranged in a definite pattern and an internal symmetry.
Ionic Compounds
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Low melting points and boiling points.
Typically not water soluble
Soft or brittle solid forms.
Poor electrical and thermal conductivity
Polar Covalent molecules are more likely to dissolve in water
Properties of Covalent Compounds
Electrons are shared, between two nonmetals or metalloids.
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Polar Vs Non-polar Covalent
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Electrons are shared equally
Molecules are symmetrical
No charges
Non-polar
Electrons are not shared equally
Molecules are asymmetrical
Molecules have slight charges
Polar
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Don't fit the usual model of covalent and have some different properties.
Ex. Diamond and Graphite:
Both made of Carbon but are different because of the # of bonds
Giant Covalent
Structures
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Another giant covalent structure but has Silicon and Carbon
Properties:
Hard
High melting point
semi-conductor - silicon is a metalloid
Some text here about the topic of discussion.
Silicon Carbide
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How many bonds will a C atom form?
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Graphite is soft because
it has strong covalent bonds
its layers can slide over one another due to weak forces between the layers
it has weak van der Waals forces between layers
it is used as a lubricant
Ionic, covalent and giant covalent compounds
By Angela Thornsberry
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