electricity and heat conductors, lustrous when cut/polished
-high boiling points
-malleable (shapeable)
-ductile (drawn into wire)
-often hard
low ionisation/electronegativity
they must have charged particles that can move (electrons)
must contain mobile particles that can move quickly from areas of high temp (sea of delocalised electrons)
must have forces between particles that can adjust when particles out of position
they must have a sea of delocalised electrons that reflect light
they must have strong attractive forces that exist between particles
yes
-malleable
-dense
-conductors of heat and electricity
-lustrous when cleaned
down the group
metal hydroxide +hydrogen
metal salt + hydrogen (violent)
metal oxide
-mined
-refined
-made into product
-used
-disposed
-recycled
-product
-mining
-metal extraction (electrolysis)
-refining metal (often electrolysis)
-collecting
-sorting
-processing
-melting
-purification/refining
-cooling/transportation
-new products
-high boiling/melting point
-hard/brittle
-not conductivity in solid state (no sea of delocalised electrons)
-conductive in molten/dissolves state (sea of delocalised electrons)
metals bond with non-metals
metals donate electrons to become cations (non metals accept and become anion)
pawsitive ions!! 😂😂
a 3D lattice with ions held togeyher by electrostatic forces
strong 3D ionic bonding within salts
string ionic bonding within crystal mean that when struck, layes slide, causing repulsion of similarly charged ions, causing it to break
in solid
-no freedom of movement (not conductive)
in molten/aqueous
-ions free to move therefore carry a current
ions move but electrons do not (no sea of delocalised electrons)
strong electrostatic attraction (ionic bond)
metal first (eg sodium chloride)
tightly bond group of atoms that behaves as a single unit as it has an overall charge (eg CO3(2-)
H2O bonded with crystal (water releases as crystal decomposes (changes state))
fluid
the substance taht dissolves
solvent +solute
aqueous
if particles of the solvent and solute attract each other more than they attract the original compound
ionic =dissociation
covalent =ionisation
when two solutions of soluble compounds mix and because two ions attract more, they create a solid
a precipitate
spectator ions
spectator ions
the relative attraction (increased up and right on pt)
positive nuclei and negative shared electrons
velence shell electrion pair repulsion theory
electron pairs in molecules repel each other and take up positions as far away from one another as possible
nope
boron flouride as it is a trigonal planar due to its way of filling the schrodinger model of electrons (1s2,2p6)
just like another molecule attached to the positive nuclei
when reasonable eectronegativity difference between atoms on either end of covalent bond
>=0.4
a permanent dipole
H=2.2
C=2.6
N=3.0
C=3.4
a molecule that doesnt contain polar bonds and is symmetrical
a molecule that does contain polar bonds and is asymmetrical (all ways)
an imbalance of electrons due to electronegativity that causes one side to be positively charged and the other to be negatively charged
between molecules (outside)
relatively week compared to intra
due to electrostatic attraction
dispersion forces
dipole dipole attraction
hydrogen bonding (extreme dipole dipole)
ion dipole attraction
internal covalent bonds in molecule
sharing electrons
strong bonds
covalent, ionic and metallic
the inter forced between molecules
inter forces are strong
holds molecules in place (vibrate on the spot)
lowest energy
inter forces are moderate
holds molecules closesly packed but can move/flow
mid energy
inter forces are broken
free moving molecules
highest energy
in all covalent molecules but especially important for non-polar
due to instantaneous dipoles caused by electrons perfectly placed during their movement to create a negative and positive charge
in bigger cells (more electrons)
closely packed
linear
smaller in double/triple bonds
attractive forces between polar molecules
this takes energy to break up (solids have this)
attractive forces between molecules containing hydrogen, bonded to flourine, oxygen and nitrogen (basically just extreme dipole dipole)
dispersion
ion dipole
dipole dipole
hydrogen bonding
attractive forces between ion and polar molecules
the larger the charge the stronger the force
yes!
therefore covalent bonding takes even more energy to break down than hudrogen bonding
diamond, graphite, buckyballs, carbon nanotubes (all diff arrangements)
diff properties of carbon allotropes
covalent network lattice in the shape of a tetrahedral
no sea of delocalised electrons (meaning must have string attraction (electrostatic/negative or covalent bond))
covalent layer lattice with a shape of layers
none as each carbon atom has 4 bonding pairs of electrons
1 pair as each carbon atom has 3 other carbon atoms bonded
yes, therefore electrical conductivity and weak dispersion forces between layers meaning layers can slide meaning good lubricant
no consisten structure and is reacgive and conductive
combustion of plant material in limited O2 supply
used in rubber products and printer toner
very porous surface used to adsorb (no typo) impurities
they must have tightly packed lattices
the orientation of hydrogen bonds causes the molecules to push further apart, lowering the density
the orientation of hydrogens cause molecules to push each ither further apart, lowering the density