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1 Ionic Compounds 1 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

2 Ionic Compounds 2 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

3 3 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Elements and compounds Elements are made up of just one type of atom. Some elements exist as single atoms (e.g. argon, Ar). In other elements, the atoms are joined to each other by chemical bonds (e.g. chlorine, Cl 2 ). Compounds are made up of different types of atoms. They are formed when different elements react and form bonds with each other (e.g. water, H 2 O). There are four different types of compound. These are: ionic simple molecular covalent giant covalent metallic.

4 What are ionic compounds? 4 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Compounds that contain ions are called ionic compounds. They are usually formed by a reaction between a metal and a nonmetal There are strong electrostatic forces of attraction in all directions between oppositely charged ions. This electrostatic attraction is called ionic bonding. The type of bonding in a compound affects its physical properties, including melting and boiling points, solubility and electrical conductivity. It is the whole compound that has these properties, not the atoms themselves.

5 How are ionic bonds formed? 5 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

6 Ionic Compounds 6 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

7 Chemical formula 7 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 The chemical formula of a compound tells you how many of each type of atom or ion are in each molecule. For example, the chemical formula for water is H 2 O. This says that there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom in each water molecule. In ionic compounds, there are millions of ions held together by electrostatic forces. Instead of counting how many of each type of ion there are, we look at the ratio of the ions. The ratio of ions, written in its simplest form, is called the empirical formula. The positive ion is written first.

8 Empirical formula 8 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 The empirical formula describes the ratio of ions. In magnesium oxide, for every Mg 2+ ion there is one O 2 ion, so the ratio of ions is 1:1. This means the empirical formula for magnesium oxide is MgO. In calcium chloride, for every Ca 2+ ion there are two Cl ions, so the ratio of ions is 1:2. This means the empirical formula for calcium chloride is CaCl 2. In aluminium oxide, for every two Al 3+ ions there are three O 2 ions, so the ratio of ions is 2:3. This means the empirical formula for aluminium oxide is Al 2 O 3.

9 Finding the formula from a diagram (1) 9 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 This is a diagram of sodium chloride. What is the empirical formula? Count the number of bonds for each type of ion. Each chloride ion is bonded to six sodium ions. Each sodium ion is bonded to six chloride ions. This means the ratio of sodium ions to chloride ions is 1:1, so the empirical formula is NaCl. Key Na + Cl

10 Finding the formula from a diagram (2) 10 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 This is a diagram of sodium oxide. What is the empirical formula? Count the number of bonds for each type of ion. Each oxide ion is bonded to eight sodium ions. Each sodium ion is bonded to four oxide ions This means the ratio of sodium ions to oxide ions is 2:1, so the empirical formula is Na 2 O. Key Na + O 2

11 Finding the formula from the ions Some positive ions and some negative ions react together to form an ionic compound. How do you find the empirical formula of the compound? To work out the empirical formula of an ionic compound: 1. Write down the symbol for each element the metal is always written first. 2. Calculate the charge for each type of ion. 3. Balance the number of ions so that the positive and negative charges are balanced and equal zero. This gives the ratio of ions. 4. Use the ratio to write down the empirical formula of the ionic compound. 11 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

12 12 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Empirical formula of potassium iodide What is the formula of potassium iodide? Symbol Ion charge Balance the number of ions Ratio of ions Empirical formula K potassium ion is needed for 1 iodide ion 1:1 KI I K 1 electron I K + I

13 Empirical formula of lithium oxide 13 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 What is the formula of lithium oxide? Symbol Ion charge Balance the number of ions Ratio of ions Empirical formula Li O lithium ions are needed for 1 oxide ion 2:1 Li 2 O Li Li + 1 electron O O 2 from each Li Li Li +

14 14 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Empirical formula of aluminium bromide What is the formula of aluminium bromide? Symbol Ion charge Balance the number of ions Ratio of ions Empirical formula Br Al Br aluminium ion is needed for 3 bromide ions 1:3 AlBr 3 Br Al 1 electron for each Br Br Al 3+ Br Br Br

15 15 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Empirical formula of aluminium oxide What is the formula of aluminium oxide? Symbol Ion charge Balance the number of ions Ratio of ions Empirical formula Al O aluminium ions are needed for 3 oxide ions 2:3 Al 2 O 3 Al Al 2 electrons for each oxygen O O O Al 3+ Al 3+ O 2 O 2 O 2

16 More ionic formulae 16 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Work out the formulae of the missing ionic compounds. metals nonmetals F Li Ca Na Mg Al K LiF CaF 2 NaF MgF 2 AlF 3 KF O N Br S Cl Li 2 O CaO Na 2 O MgO Al 2 O 3 K 2 O Li 3 N Ca 3 N 2 Na 3 N Mg 3 N 2 AlN K 3 N LiBr CaBr 2 NaBr MgBr 2 AlBr 3 KBr Li 2 S CaS Na 2 S MgS Al 2 S 3 K 2 S LiCl CaCl 2 NaCl MgCl 2 AlCl 3 KCl

17 What is the empirical formula? 17 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

18 Ionic Compounds 18 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

19 What is an ionic lattice? 19 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 In an ionic compound, millions and millions of ions are packed together in a regular lattice arrangement, joined by strong ionic bonds between oppositely charged ions. This forms a giant 3D structure called a giant ionic lattice. The ionic lattice will continue to build in this way until there are no more ions left to add. The structure of the ionic lattice affects the properties of the ionic compound.

20 Why do ionic compounds form crystals? 20 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 When solid, sodium chloride forms crystals with a cubic shape. This is due to the regular structure of the ionic lattice. All ionic compounds form lattices and crystals when solid.

21 Heating ionic compounds 21 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Ionic compounds are solid at room temperature, and have high melting points and boiling points. compound sodium chloride magnesium oxide ion charges 1 + and 1 melting point ( o C) boiling point ( o C) 2 + and 2 2,852 3, ,413 Ionic compounds have lots of strong ionic bonds and a large amount of energy is needed to break them. strong ionic bonds hold ions together Larger ionic charges produce stronger ionic bonds and so much more energy is required to break the ionic bonds in magnesium oxide than in sodium chloride.

22 Comparing melting points (1) 22 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 Ionic compounds have high melting points because lots of energy is needed to break the strong ionic bonds. Substances made up of simple covalent molecules have low melting points. This is because not much energy is needed to break the weak intermolecular forces between the molecules. Giant covalent structures have high melting points because lots of energy is needed to break all of the strong covalent bonds between the atoms. Metals have high melting points because lots of energy is needed to break the strong metallic bonds.

23 Comparing melting points (2) 23 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 The type of bonding in a substance affects its properties Fill in the gaps in the table. bonding type of structure melting point state at room temperature ionic giant ionic high NaCl: 801 C MgO: 2852 C solid covalent simple molecular giant covalent low high CH 4 : 182 C H 2 O: 0 C diamond: 3730 C SiO 2 : 1610 C usually gas or liquid solid metallic giant metallic high Cu: 1085 C Al: 660 C solid (except mercury liquid)

24 How do ionic compounds dissolve? 24 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

25 Electrical conductivity 25 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

26 How can ionic compounds conduct electricity? 26 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016 As solids, ionic compounds cannot conduct electricity because their ions are bonded together in the lattice. ions in solid state cannot move When liquid (molten), the ions can break free of the lattice and are able to move. The ions are charged particles and so can carry an electric current. ions in molten state can move and conduct electricity Ionic compounds are usually soluble in water because water molecules have a slight electrical charge and so can attract the ions away from the lattice. When dissolved, the ions are free to move and can carry an electric current.

27 Ionic Compounds 27 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

28 Ionic compounds true or false? 28 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

29 Effect of structure on properties 29 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

30 Glossary 30 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

31 Multiplechoice quiz 31 of 31 Boardworks Ltd 2016

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