

Bonding and Chemical Formula
Presentation
•
Chemistry
•
9th - 12th Grade
•
Hard
Joseph Anderson
FREE Resource
15 Slides • 12 Questions
1
Bonding and Formulas

2
Theme: Based on their positions in the periodic table, atoms combine in predictable ways to form compounds with different properties.
When atoms form compounds, each atom is more stable in the compound than it was by itself.
3
Vocabulary review
Valence electrons: the electrons in the outermost energy level
Element: substance made up of atoms that are all alike.
Compound: substance formed from two or more elements that are chemically combined.
4
Multiple Select
An example(s) of an element is ____.
Choose all that apply.
Water (H2O)
Table salt (NaCl)
Hydrogen (H2)
Oxygen (O2)
5
Multiple Select
An example(s) of a compound is _____.
(Choose all that apply)
H2O
NaCl
H2
O2
6
Multiple Choice
Elements in group 14 (4A) have how many valence electrons?
4 valence electrons
7 valence electrons
2 valence electrons
7
Multiple Choice
Aluminum (Al) has _____ valence electrons.
7
1
3
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Elements combine to form compounds, which often have new properties.
Sodium (Na): reacts vigorously with water
Chlorine (Cl): toxic, poisonous
When combined, NaCl is essential to life, dissolves in water.
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Chemical formula show what elements a compound contains and the exact number of atoms of each element in a unit of compound.
Subscript means "written below"
A subscript written after a symbol tells how many atoms of that element are in a single unit of that compound.
Example: H2O --> 2 hydrogens for every 1 oxygen atom
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Open Ended
Look at the chemical formula: SiO2.
1. Which elements combine to form this compound?
2. How many atoms of each element are required to form this compound?
11
Open Ended
Look at the chemical formula: CaO.
1. Which elements combine to form this compound?
2. How many atoms of each element are required to form this compound?
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Why do atoms form compounds?
Atoms want to have a full outermost shell.
Bonds are formed when valence electrons are gained, lost, or shared by atoms.
13
Multiple Choice
In which GROUP are the atoms most stable (full outermost energy shell)?
Group 13 (3A)
Group 17 (7A)
Group 18 (8A)
Group 1 (1A)
14
Bonding and valence electrons
Noble gases rarely form compounds because they are unusually stable (they have a full outer energy level).
An atom is chemically stable when its outer energy level is complete.
15
How do the electron dot diagrams represent elements, and how does that relate to their abilities to make compounds?
It tells you how many valence electrons an atom has.
When shells are not full, they become more stable when it is part of a compound.
If the outer level is full, it is stable. Otherwise, it is likely to form bonds to gain stability.
16
How do elements change their outer electrons to become stable?
Atoms with unstable outer energy levels can lose, gain, or share electrons with other atoms to obtain a stable outer energy level.
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Chemical bonds
When atoms gain, lose, or share electrons, an attraction forms between the atoms, pulling them together to form a compound.
A chemical bond is the force that holds atoms together in a compound.
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Metal + Nonmetal Bonding
Example: Na and Cl --> Na loses 1 electron and Cl gains 1 electron.
By doing this, they both form a stable outer level.
This is called an ionic bond (gain or lose electrons).
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Nonmetal + Nonmetal Bonding
Example: H2 and O share electrons.
By doing this, they are forming a stable outer level.
This is a covalent bond (sharing electrons).
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Multiple Select
Which elements will form an IONIC BOND?
Na + Cl
H2 + O
C + O
Li + Cl
21
Multiple Select
Which elements will form a COVALENT BOND?
Na + Cl
H2 + O
C + O
Li + Cl
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Open Ended
Explain why some elements are stable on their own while others are more stable in compounds.
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If an element has a full outer energy level, it has a tendency to not react with other atoms because it is already stable.
If an element does not have a full outer energy level, then it will form a compound by gaining, losing, or sharing electrons with other atoms in order to achieve a full outer energy level.
24
Multiple Select
What are two ways that bonds can form?
By losing or gaining electrons (ionic bonds)
By sharing electrons (covalent bonds)
Bonds don't form between atoms.
25
Open Ended
The label on a box of cleanser states that it contains CH 3 COOH. What elements are in this compound? How many atoms of each element can be found in a unit of CH 3 COOH?
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CH3COOH
Hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen are in the compound.
Each unit contains: four hydrogen, two carbon, and two oxygen atoms.
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Summary
A chemical formula describes the numbers and types of atoms in a compound.
The elements in group 18 (8A), the noble gases, rarely combine with other elements.
Most atoms need 8 electrons to complete their outer energy levels (He needs 2).
A chemical bond is the force that holds atoms together in a compound.
Bonding and Formulas

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