Compounds, Chemical Formulas, and Covalent Bonds
Sharing
Atoms can bond to form compounds by BLANK valence electrons.
Molecular Models
BLANK show the shape and appearance of the arrangement of atoms in a compound.
Oxygen Atom
Because the electrons have a slight negative charge, there is a slight negative charge near the BLANK BLANK atom.
Covalent Compounds
Blank generally have low melting points and low boiling points.
Properties
Compounds and the elements that form them often have very different chemical and physical BLANK
Elements
Compounds are chemical combinations of two or more BLANK
poor
Covalent compounds are BLANK conductors of electricity.
Nonpolar
Molecules made up of atoms of the same element are BLANK because the atoms are identical. So, they share electrons equally.
Dissolve
Polar molecules, such as sugar and water, BLANK easily in one another because of the attraction of opposite charges.
Covalent Bond
A BLANK is a chemical bond formed when two or more atoms share one or more pairs of valence electrons.
molecules
A BLANK is a group of atoms held together by covalent bonding that acts as an independent unit.
Chemical Formula
A BLANK is a group of chemical symbols and numbers that represent the elements and the numbers of atoms of each element in a compound.
Triple
In a BLANK covalent bond, three pairs of valence electrons are shared between two atoms.
Two (2)
In a carbon dioxide molecule, a double covalent bond forms when the carbon atom shares BLANK pairs of valence electrons with each oxygen atom.
Strongly
In a covalent bond, one atom can attract the shared electrons more (BLANK) than the other atom can.
Single
In a hydrogen molecule, a BLANK covalent bond forms when each atom shares it valence electrons with the other.
Oxygen
In a molecule of water, the BLANK atom attracts the electrons more strongly than each hydrogen atom does.
letters
The BLANK in a chemical formula represent elements.
Postive
There is a slight BLANK charge near the hydrogen atoms.
Stronger
Triple covalent bonds are BLANK than double covalent bonds, which are stronger than single bonds.
Shared
When forming water, valence electrons are BLANK between oxygen and hydrogen atoms, thereby forming covalent bonds to make three stable atoms.