Bonding, structure and the properties of matter

    Cards (31)

    • what is ionic bonding?
      • electrostatic attraction between positive and negative ions
      • relatively strong attraction
    • how are ionic compounds held together?
      • in a giant lattice
      • regular structure that extends in all directions in a substance
      • electrostatic attraction between positive and negative ions holds the structure together
    • state properties of ionic substances
      • high melting and boiling points (strong electrostatic forces between oppositely charged ions)
      • don’t conduct electricity when solid (ions in fixed positions)
      • conduct when molten or dissolved in water - ions are free to move
    • give 5 examples of positive and negative ions.
      what is important when working out a formula of an ionic compound?
      • P: Na+ Mg2+ Al3+ Ca2+ Rb+N: Cl- Br- SO2-4 No-3 OH-
      • ionic compounds are electrically neutral
    • how are ionic compounds formed?
      • reaction of a metal with a non-metal
      • electron transfer occurs - metal gives away its outer shell electrons to non-metal
    • what is a covalent bond?
      shared pair of electrons between 2 atoms
    • describe the structure and properties of simple molecular covalent substances
      • don’t conduct electricity (no ions)
      • small molecules
      • weak intermolecular forces
      • low melting and boiling points
    • how do intermolecular forces change as the mass/size of the molecule increases?
      • increase
      • causes melting/boiling points to increase as well (more energy needed to overcome these forces)
    • what are polymers? What are thermosoftening polymers?
      • very large molecules with atoms linked by covalent bonds
      • special type of polymers, melt/soften when heated, no bonds between polymer chains. Strong intermolecular forces ensure that the structure is solid at room temperature, forces are overcome with heating - polymer melts
    • what are giant covalent substances? give examples.
      • solids, atoms covalently bonded together in a giant lattice
      • high melting/boiling points - strong covalent bonds
      • mostly don’t conduct electricity 
      • diamond, graphite, silicon dioxide
    • name the allotropes of carbon
      • diamond
      • fullerenes
      • graphite
      • nanotubes
      • graphene
    • describe and explain diamond
      • four, strong covalent bonds for each carbon atom
      • very hard, strong bonds
      • very high melting point
      • doesn’t conduct
    • describe and explain graphite
      • three covalent bonds for each carbon atom
      • layers of hexagonal rings
      • high melting points
      • layers free to slide as weak intermolecular forces between layers,
      • soft, can be used as lubricant
      • conduct thermal and electricity due to one delocalised electron per each carbon atom
    • describe and explain fullerenes
      • hollow shaped molecules
      • based on hexagonal rings but may have 5/7 carbon rings
      • C60 has spherical shape, simple molecular structure (buckminsterfullerene)
    • describe and explain nanotubes
      • cylindrical fullerene with length to diameter ratio
      • high tensile strength (strong bonds)
      • conductivity (delocalised electrons)
    • describe and explain graphene
      single layer of graphite
    • what is metallic bonding?
      forces of attraction between delocalised electrons and nuclei of metal ions
    • describe properties of metals
      • high melting/boiling points (strong forces of attraction)
      • good conductors of heat and electricity (delocalised electrons)
      • malleable, soft (layers of atoms can slide over each other whilst maintaining the attraction forces)
    • what are alloys? why are they harder than pure metals?
      • mixtures of metal with other elements, usually metals
      • different sizes of atoms distorts the layers so they can’t slide over each other, making them harder than pure metals
    • describe the properties of simple covalent structures
      • low boiling and melting points due to weak intermolecular forces between molecules
      • poor conductivity when solid as no ions to conduct
      • poor conductivity when molten as no ions
      • mostly gases and liquids
    • describe the properties of ionic structures
      • high melting/boiling points due to giant lattice of ions with strong forces between oppositely charged ions
      • poor conductivity when solid as ions can’t move
      • good conductivity when molten as ions are free to move
      • crystalline solids
    • describe the properties of giant covalent structures
      • high boiling/melting points due to many strong covalent bonds between atoms
      • poor conductivity when solid in diamond and sand as electrons can’t move
      • good in graphite as free delocalised electrons between layers can move
      • poor conductivity when molten
      • generally solids
    • describe the properties of metallic structures
      • high melting/boiling points as strong electrostatic forces between positive ions and delocalised electrons
      • good conductivity when solid as delocalised electrons are free to move through the structure
      • good conductivity when molten
      • generally shiny metal solids
    • what are the limitations of the simple model?
      • shows particles as spheres
      • doesn’t take into account different sizes of particles
      • no forces are shown
      • spheres are shown as solid
    • what does the amount of energy needed to change state from solid to liquid or liquid to gas depend on?
      • strength of the forces between the particles of the substance
      • nature of the particles involved depends on the type of bonding and the structure of the substance
      • the stronger the forces between the particles, the higher the melting/boiling point of the substance
    • a pure substance will melt or boil at…
      • a fixed temperature
      • a mixture will melt over a range of temperatures
    • 3 states of matter
      solid, liquid and gas
    • what is nanoscience?
      science that studies particles that are 1-100nm in size
    • state the uses of nanoparticles
      • medicine (drug delivery systems)
      • electronics
      • deodorants
      • sun creams (better skin coverage and more effective protection against cell damage)
    • what are fine and coarse particles?
      fine particles (soot) 100-2500 nm diametercoarse particles (dust) 2500-10^5 nm diameter
    • why do nanoparticles have different properties to those for the same materials in bulk?
      high surface area to volume ratio