CM-UY 1004 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Manganese, Iron(Iii) Oxide, Sulfide

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20 Sep 2016
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Covalent chemical bonds involve the sharing of a pair of valence electrons by two atoms, in contrast to the transfer of electrons in ionic bonds. Such bonds lead to stable molecules if they share electrons in such a way as to create a noble gas configuration for each atom. Two nonmetals share electrons so both have 8 valence electrons. Neither takes on a charge ~ no valence. Note: the line represents a connection between 2 electrons. Before we go there, understand how this worked. Like ionic bonding, we want the atoms to get to a full valence shell of 8 electrons. (hydrogen -2) to do this, the elements will share their electrons, in a bonding matter. Going back to the example on water (h2o), Hydrogen will be happy it it has a full set of electrons. However, right now it only has: the one is its valence electrons.

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