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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY

4.1 CHEMICAL BONDS


Chemical compounds are conveniently divided into two broad classes:
Ionic compounds Molecular (Covalent) compounds.
1. Metal and non-metal element Non-metal and non-metal elements
combinations combinations.
2. High melting brittle crystalline solids. Gases, liquids, or waxy, low melting soft solids.
(500°C - 2000°C)
3. Do not conduct as a solid but conducts Do not conduct electricity at any state.
electricity when molten.
4. Dissolved in water produce conducting Most are soluble in non-polar solvents and few
solutions (electrolytes) and few are soluble in water. These solutions are non-conducting
in non-polar solvents. (non-electrolytes).

Chemical bond is the attractive force that holds two atoms together in a more complex unit.
Two broad categories of chemical compounds.
1. Ionic bond is a chemical bond formed through the transfer of one or more electrons from one atom or group
of atoms to another atom or group of atoms.
An ionic compound is a compound in which ionic bonds are present
2. Covalent bond is a chemical bond formed through the sharing of one or more pairs of electrons between two
atoms.
A molecular compound is a compound in which covalent bonds are present.

4.2 VALENCE ELECTRONS AND LEWIS SYMBOLS

Valence electrons are the number of electrons present in the outermost energy shells. The number of valence
electrons present in an element is reflected by its position in the periodic table. For such elements, valence electrons
are always found in either s or p subshells.

Lewis symbol is the chemical symbol of an element surrounded


by dots equal in number to the number of valence electrons
present in atoms of the element.
Lewis symbols, named in honor of the American chemist
Gilbert N. Lewis, who first introduced them, are also
frequently called electron-dot structures.

Determine the number of valence electrons in atoms of each of


the following elements.
a. ₁₂Mg b. ₁₄Si c. ₃₃As

Solution
a. Atoms of the element magnesium have two valence electrons, as can be seen by examining magnesium’s
electron configuration.

b. Atoms of the element silicon have four valence electrons

c. Atoms of the element arsenic have five valence electrons.

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Three important generalizations about valence electrons can be drawn from a study of the Lewis symbols:
1. Representative elements in the same group of the periodic table have the same number of valence electrons.

2. The number of valence electrons for representative elements is the same as the Roman numeral periodic table
group number
3. The maximum number of valence electrons for any element is eight.

Write Lewis symbols for the following elements.


a. O, S, and Se b. B, C, and N

Solution
a. These elements are all Group VIA elements and thus possess six valence electrons. The Lewis symbols, which all
have six “dots,” are

b. b. These elements are sequential elements in Period 2 of the periodic table; B is in Group IIIA (three valence
electrons), C is in Group IVA (four valence electrons), and N is in Group VA (five valence electrons).
The Lewis symbols for these elements are

4.3 THE OCTET RULE


Octet rule is that an atom will be most stable when surrounded by 8 electrons in the valence shell.

An atom that does not have eight electrons will bond with other atoms to have eight electrons. A configuration that
has eight electrons is also referred to as the ‘noble-gas configuration’.

The valence electron configurations of the noble gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon) are considered
the most stable of all valence electron configurations. All of the noble gases except helium possess eight valence
electrons, which is the maximum number possible. Helium’s valence electron configuration is 1s2. All of the other noble
gases possess ns² np⁶ valence electron configurations, where n has the maximum value found in the atom.

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The Bohr model shows the atom as a central nucleus containing protons and neutrons with the electrons in circular
orbitals at specific distances from the nucleus.

Each shell can only hold certain number of electrons. K shell can have 2, L can have 8, M can have 18 electrons and N
can hold 32 electrons.

K= 2 electrons
L = 8 electrons
M = 18 electrons
N = 32 electrons

Example:

 Lithium has three electrons:


o two go to K shell and
o The remaining one goes to the L shell.
o Its electronic configuration is K(2), L(1)
o Lithium has 1 valence electron (red dot).

 Fluorine has nine electrons:


o two go to K shell and
o The remaining seven go to the L shell.
o Its electronic configuration is K(2), L(7). Note that L can have 8 electrons.
o Fluorine has 7 valence electrons. (red dot)

 Aluminum has thirteen electrons:


o two go to the K shell,
o eight go to the L shell, and
o The remaining three go to the M shell.
o Its electronic configuration is K(2), L(8), M(3). Note that the M shell can have 18 electrons.
o Aluminum has 3 electrons. (red dot).

4.4 THE IONIC BOND MODEL

Electron transfer between two or more atoms is central to the ionic bond model. This electron transfer process
produces charged particles called ions. An ion is an atom (or group of atoms) that is electrically charged as a result of
the loss or gain of electrons.

If an atom gains one or more electrons, it becomes a negatively charged ion; excess negative charge is present
because electrons outnumber protons.
If an atom loses one or more electrons, it becomes a positively charged ion; more protons are present than electrons.

The charge on an ion depends on the number of electrons that are lost or gained.
Loss of one, two, or three electrons gives ions with +1, +2, or +3 charges, respectively.
Gain of one, two, or three electrons gives ions with -1, -2, or -3 charges, respectively.

Example:
Give the chemical symbol for each of the following ions.
a. The ion formed when a barium atom loses two electrons
b. The ion formed when a phosphorus atom gains three electrons

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Solution:
a. A neutral barium atom contains 56 protons and 56 electrons because barium has an atomic number of 56. The
barium ion formed by the loss of 2 electrons would still contain 56 protons but would have only 54 electrons
because 2 electrons were

b. The atomic number of phosphorus is 15. Thus 15 protons and 15 electrons are present in a neutral phosphorus
atom. A gain of 3 electrons raises the electron count to 18.

4.5 THE SIGN AND MAGNITUDE OF IONIC CHARGE


The octet rule provides a very simple and straightforward explanation for the charge magnitude associated with ions of
the representative elements. Atoms tend to gain or lose electrons until they have obtained an electron configuration
that is the same as that of a noble gas.

The considerations we have just applied to generalizations:


1. Metal atoms containing one, two, or three valence electrons (the metals in Groups IA, IIA, and IIIA of the
periodic table) tend to lose electrons to acquire a noble-gas electron configuration. The noble gas involved is
the one preceding the metal in the periodic table.
Group IA metals form 1+ ions.
Group IIA metals form 2+ ions.
Group IIIA metals form 3+ ions.
2. Nonmetal atoms containing five, six, or seven valence electrons (the nonmetals in Groups VA, VIA, and VIIA of
the periodic table) tend to gain electrons to acquire a noble-gas electron configuration. The noble gas involved
is the one following the nonmetal in the periodic table.

Group VIIA nonmetals form 1- ions.


Group VIA nonmetals form 2- ions.
Group VA nonmetals form 3- ions.
3. Elements in Group IVA occupy unique positions relative to the noble gases. They would have to gain or lose
four electrons to attain a noble-gas structure.

Example:
1. The element sodium has the electron configuration.

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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY

2. The element chlorine has the electron configuration

4.6 LEWIS STUCTURES FOR IONIC COMPOUNDS

Ion formation requires the presence of two elements:

A. a metal that can donate electrons


B. Nonmetal that can accept electrons.

The electrons lost by the metal are the same ones gained by the nonmetal. The positive and negative ions
simultaneously formed from such electron transfer attract one another. The result is the formation of an
ionic compound.

Lewis structure is a combination of Lewis symbols that represents either the transfer or the sharing of
electrons in chemical bonds.

Lewis Symbols – Ionic Compounds

Recall that Lewis symbols can be used to illustrate the formation of cations from atoms, as shown here for sodium
and calcium:

Likewise, they can be used to show the formation of anions from atoms, as shown here for chlorine and sulfur:

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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
1. The reaction between the element sodium (with one valence electron) and chlorine (with seven valence
electrons) is represented as follows with a Lewis structure: NaCl

2. When sodium, which has one valence electron, combines with oxygen, which has six valence electrons, the
oxygen atom requires the presence of two sodium atoms to acquire two additional electrons. Na₂O

3. Na₃N

4. MgO

5. Al₂S₃

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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
4.7 CHEMICAL FORMULAS FOR IONIC COMPOUNDS
Electron loss always equals electron gain in an electron transfer process. Consequently, ionic compounds
are always neutral; no net charge is present. The total positive charge present on the ions that have lost
electrons always is counterbalanced by the total negative charge on the ions that have gained electrons.

Writing the formulas for aluminum nitride and lithium oxide.

Write the formula for Write the formula for lithium


aluminum nitride oxide
1. Write the symbol and charge of cations anions cations anions
the cation (metal) first and the anion Al³⁺ N³⁻ Li⁺ O²⁻
(nonmetal) second.
2. Use a multiplier to make the total total charge of cations = total charge of total charge of cations = total charge of
charge of the cations and anions anions anions
equal to each other. Al³⁺ N³⁻ Li⁺ O²⁻
+3 -3 Li⁺ __
1(3+) = 1(3-)
+2 -2
+3 = -3
2 Li (1+) = 1 O 2-)
+2 = -2
3. Use the multipliers (written in
color red #2) as subscript for each Al1N1 Li2O1
ion.
4. Write the final formula. Leave out
all charges and all subscripts that AlN Li2O
are 1.
CRISSCROSS METHOD
1. Write the symbol and charge of cations anions cations anions
the cation (metal) first and the anion Al³⁺ N³⁻ Li⁺ O²⁻
(nonmetal) second.
2. Transpose only the number of the
positive charge to become the
subscript of the anion and the Al³⁺ N³⁻ Li⁺ O²⁻
number only of the negative charge
to become the subscript of the
cation.
3. Reduce to the lowest ratio
Al₃N₃ This step is not necessary.
4. Write the final formula. Leave out
all charges and all subscripts that AlN Li2O
are 1.
Another example:
BaCl₂ = Barium chloride Ca₃N₂ = Calcium nitride
total charge of cations = total charge of anions total charge of cations = total charge of anions
Ba⁺² Cl⁻ Ca⁺² N⁻³
Cl⁻ Ca⁺² N⁻³
+2 -2 Ca⁺² ___
+6 -6
1(2+)=2(-1)
+2=-2 3(2+)=2(3-)
+6=-6
Or
Or
Ba⁺² Cl⁻
Ca⁺² N⁻³

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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY

4.8 RECOGNIZING AND NAMING BINARY IONIC COMPOUNDS


The term binary means “two.” A binary compound is a compound in which only two elements are present.
The compounds NaCl, CO₂, NH₃, and P₁O₁₀ are all binary compounds.

Binary ionic compound is an ionic compound in which one element present is a metal and the other element
present is a nonmetal. The metal is always present as the positive ion, and the nonmetal is always present as the
negative ion.

Recognizing a Binary Ionic Compound on the Basis of its Chemical Formula:


a. Al₂S₃
= Ionic; a metal (Al) and a nonmetal (S) are present.
b. H₂O
= Not ionic; two nonmetals are present.
c. KF
= Ionic; a metal (K) and a nonmetal (F) are present.
d. NH₃
= Not ionic; two nonmetals are present.

Names of Selected Common Nonmetallic Ions

Rules:

1. The full name of the metallic element is given first, followed by a separate word containing the stem of the
nonmetallic element name and the suffix -ide.
The general pattern for naming binary ionic compounds is:
Name of metal + stem of name of nonmetal + -ide

Naming Binary Ionic Compound:


a. MgO c. K₃N
= The metal is magnesium and the nonmetal is oxygen. Thus the = potassium nitride
compound’s name is magnesium oxide.
b. Al₂S₃ d. CaCl2
= aluminum sulfide = calcium chloride

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Naming Ionic with Transition Metals

RULES:
1. The simpler, more modern approach, uses the IUPAC, or International Union of Pure and Applied
Chemistry, system. This method indicates the charge of a transition metal cation by writing a corresponding
Roman numeral in parentheses after the element name, but before the word "ion," in an ion name.

Possible Transition Metal Charges and Their IUPAC Roman numeral Designations

Charge Roman Numeral


+1 (I)
+2 (II)
+3 (III)
+4 (IV)
+5 (V)
+6 (VI)
+7 (VII)

2. The second system, called the common system uses two suffixes, "-ous" and "-ic," to distinguish the names of
transition metal elements.
"-ous" suffix indicates the cation with the lesser relative cation charge
"-ic" suffix is used to refer to a cation with a larger charge.

For example, the Latin stem for "iron" is "ferr-." Therefore, using the common system, Fe+2 is called the "ferrous ion,"
and Fe+3 is named as the "ferric ion."

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OTHER EXAMPLES OF TRANSITIONAL ITH THEIR NAMES

Element Stem Charge IUPAC Name Common Name

+2 chromium (II) ion chromous ion


chromium chrom-
+3 chromium (III) ion chromic ion

+2 iron (II) ion ferrous ion


iron ferr-
+3 iron (III) ion ferric ion

+2 cobalt (II) ion cobaltous ion


cobalt cobalt-
+3 cobalt (III) ion cobaltic ion

+2 nickel (II) ion nickelous ion


nickel nickel-
+3 nickel (III) ion nickelic ion

+1 copper (I) ion cuprous ion


copper cupr-
+2 copper (II) ion cupric ion

+2 tin (II) ion stannous ion


tin stann-
+4 tin (IV) ion stannic ion

+1 gold (I) ion aurous ion


gold aur-
+3 gold (III) ion auric ion

+1 mercury (I) ion mercurous ion


mercury mercur-
+2 mercury (II) ion mercuric ion

lead plumb- +2 lead (II) ion plumbous ion

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Element Stem Charge IUPAC Name Common Name

+4 lead (IV) ion plumbic ion

EXAMPLE:
1. FeCl3
Fe Cl3
Ion charge of Fe (Iron) = +3 (ferric ion)/ iron (III) ion
Ion charge of Cl = -1 (chlorine)
Answer: Ferric chloride or iron (III) chloride

2. Hg₂O
Hg₂ O

Ion charge of Hg (Mercury) = +1 (mercurous ion)/ mercury (1) ion


Ion charge of O (oxygen) = -2
Answer= mercury (I) oxide/ mercurous oxide

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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY

4.9 POLYATOMIC IONS


There are two categories of ions:
1. monatomic
- is an ion formed from a single atom through loss or gain of electrons. All of the ions we have
dis cussed so far have been monatomic (Cl⁻, Na⁺, Ca²⁺, N³⁻ , and so on)
2. Polyatomic
- is an ion formed from a group of atoms (held together by covalent bonds) through loss or gain of
electrons. An example of a polyatomic ion is the sulfate ion, SO₄²⁻.
Ex. SO₄²⁻ = this ion contains four oxygen atoms and one sulfur atom, and the whole group of five atoms
has acquired a -2 charge.

Formulas and Names of Some Common Polyatomic Ions

The following generalizations concerning polyatomic ion names and charges emerge from consideration of the ions
listed in Table.

1. Most of the polyatomic ions have a negative charge, which can vary from -1 to -3. Only two positive ions are listed in
the table: NH₄⁺ (ammonium) and H₃O⁺ (hydronium).

2. Two of the negatively charged polyatomic ions, OH⁻ (hydroxide) and CN⁻ (cyanide), have names ending in -ide, and
the rest of them have names ending in either -ate or -ite.

3. A number of -ate, -ite pairs of ions exist, as in SO₄²⁻(sulfate) and SO₃²⁻(sulfite). The -ate ion always has one more
oxygen atom than the -ite ion. Both the -ate and -ite ions of a pair carry the same charge.

4. A number of pairs of ions exist wherein one member of the pair differs from the other by having a hydrogen atom
present, as in CO₃²⁻ (carbonate) and HCO₃⁻ (hydrogen carbonate or bicarbonate). In such pairs, the charge on the ion
that contains hydrogen is always 1 less than that on the other ion.

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4.9 CHEMICAL FORMULAS AND NAMES FOR IONIC COMPOUNDS CONTAINING POLYATOMIC IONS

Rules for Naming Ionic Compounds Containing Polyatomic Ion

Rule 1. The cation is written first in the name; the anion is written second in the name.

Rule 2. When the formula unit contains two or more of the same polyatomic ion, that ion is written in parentheses with
the subscript written outside the parentheses.

Rule 3. If the cation is a metal ion with a fixed charge, the name of the cation is the same as the (neutral) element from
which it is derived (e.g., Na+ = "sodium"). If the cation is a metal ion with a variable charge, the charge on the cation is
indicated using a Roman numeral, in parentheses, immediately following the name of the cation (e.g., Fe3+ = "iron III").

Example: Writing formula of the Ionic Compounds in Which Polyatomic Ions Are Present
1. Calcium Nitrate

total charge of cations = total charge of anions


Ca²⁺ NO₃⁻
___ NO₃⁻ There is (2) NO₃⁻ to make the net charges equal to Ca²⁺
+2 -2

Ca (NO₃⁻)₂
Answer: Ca (NO₃)₂

2. Potassium hydroxide
total charge of cations = total charge of anions
K⁺¹ OH⁻¹
+1 -1
Already same charge

Answer= KOH

3. Aluminum sulfate

total charge of cations = total charge of anions


Al³⁺ SO₄²⁻ same charge of 6. Therefore there is
Al³⁺ SO₄²⁻ 2 aluminum and 3 sulfate.
___ SO₄²⁻
+6 -6

Or Crisscross
Al³⁺ SO₄²⁻

Answer: Al₂(SO₄)₃

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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY

Writing Chemical Formulas for Ionic Compounds Containing Polyatomic Ion

1. a. Na⁺ and SO₄²⁻


The easy way to write a chemical formulas by means of crisscross method (ion charges)
Na⁺ SO₄²⁻

Answer: Na₂SO₄

2. Mg²⁺ and NO₃⁻


Mg²⁺ NO₃⁻

Answer: Mg(NO₃)₂

3. NH₄⁺ and CN⁻


NH₄⁺ CN⁻

Answer: NH₄CN

Naming Ionic Compounds in Which Polyatomic Ions Are Present


Name the following compounds, which contain one or more polyatomic ions.

1. Ca₃(PO₄)₂
The positive ion present is the calcium ion (Ca²⁺)
The negative ion is the polyatomic phosphate ion (PO₄³⁻).
The name of the compound is calcium phosphate.

2. Fe₂(SO₄)₃
The positive ion present is iron (III).
The negative ion is the polyatomic sulfate ion (SO₄ ²⁻).
The name of the compound is iron (III) sulfate.

3. (NH₄)₂CO₃
Both the positive and the negative ions in this compound are polyatomic:
ammonium ion (NH₄⁺) and the carbonate ion (CO₃²⁻)
The name of the compound is simply the combination of the names of the two polyatomic ions:
ammonium carbonate

Chapter 4: Chemical Bonding: The Ionic Bond Model 14

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