§6.4 Molecular Substances

 

The atomic number = p+

The mass number =
p+ + n0

In a neutral atom: 
p+ = e-
Remember this?
Atomic structure:
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The atomic number = p+

The mass number =
p+ + n0

In a neutral atom: 
p+ = e-
Remember this?
Atomic structure:

Slide 1 - Diapositive

Cet élément n'a pas d'instructions

Ions vs. atoms:

Metals like to lose one or more electrons

Non metals like to take in one or more electrons

Example: 
Metal: Li --> Li+ + 1e-
Non Metal: F + 1e- --> F-

Text

Slide 2 - Diapositive

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Metals (at the micro-level)
  • Metals are elements (so not compounds, not molecules)
  • They consist of positively charged metal atoms (called ions) with free electrons moving between between them. 
  • Strong attraction (metallic bonding)
  • Electricity and heat conductivity of the metal 
lattice follows from these free flowing electrons. 

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Salts
Solids salts are composed of metal and non-metal
ions. 
An ion is an atom with a charge. 
Ions form when an atom is losing or gaining electrons 
(and the number of p+ is not equal to the number of e-)

Examples: 
Kitchen salt consists of Na+ and Cl- ions
Lime stone consists of  Ca2+ CO32-(carbonate) ions

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d
d

Metals
  • Solid at room temperature (except Hg)
  • Positively charged atoms (ions) surrounded by moving electrons
  • Metallic bonding
  • Metallic lattice
  • Conduct electricity in their solid AND liquid state.



Salts
  • Salts are solids at room temperature
  • Consist of positive metal ions and negative non-metal ions
  • Ionic bonding
  • Ionic lattice
  • Conduct electricity in the liquid state (and in solution)
Comparison between metals and salts

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§6.4 Molecular substances
  • Molecular substances
  • Van der Waals bonding and hydrogen bonding
  • Atomic (covalent) bonding
  • Structural formula

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Molecular Substances
* Made up of non-metals only

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Structural formula: How atoms are linked together

ethanol (C2H6O)
H2S
N2

Attractive forces between
Molecular substances

  • van der Waals forces
    => result in van der Waals bonding => the greater the molecular mass and the contact area (surface) the stronger the van der Waals bonding(VdW-bonding).

  • possible Hydrogen-bonding
     (hydrophilic)

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Van der Waals bonding
and 
hydrogen bonding


Forces between molecules in molecular substances

They determine physical properties like phase transitions (melting point, boiling point etc.)

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Molecular substances

* Covalent bond or atomic bond

* Covalency or covalence

* Hydrophylic and hydrophobic (NH- and/or OH-groups!)

* emulsifier



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hydrophilic and hydrophobic 
The OH-  or NH-group group can form an extra bond with the OH- group in water molecules: hydrogen bond. These substances mix well with water, hydrophilic. 



Substances with no OH-group, (halo)alkanes and alkenes do not mix with water, hydrophobic. 

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hydrophilic and hydrophobic 
Some molecules have
a hydrophobic tail (e.g.                  ) and a hydrophilic head (OH-group) 

This is 
an emulsifier
C8H17

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Covalent Bonding - share electrons
Covalency:
How many bonds an atom can form

The picture shows 1 bond (consisting of 2 electrons, 1 from each atom)

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Covalency and structural formula
Type of atom
Covalency
H
1
F, Cl, Br, I
1
O, S
2
N, P
3
C
4

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Practice (in class)
Use the table on the previous slide to draw a structural formula for: 

  • ethanol (C2H5OH)
  • H2S
  • N2 

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