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Ionic Bonding: Sodium and Chlorine

1) When a sodium atom reacts with a chlorine atom, the sodium atom loses an electron to become a sodium ion (Na+), while the chlorine atom gains that electron to become a chloride ion (Cl-). 2) The sodium and chloride ions are held together by ionic bonds formed by their opposite charges attracting one another. 3) When many sodium and chloride ions bond together, they form a giant lattice structure known as sodium chloride or table salt (NaCl). The charges of all the ions add up to zero, giving the overall compound no charge.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
444 views1 page

Ionic Bonding: Sodium and Chlorine

1) When a sodium atom reacts with a chlorine atom, the sodium atom loses an electron to become a sodium ion (Na+), while the chlorine atom gains that electron to become a chloride ion (Cl-). 2) The sodium and chloride ions are held together by ionic bonds formed by their opposite charges attracting one another. 3) When many sodium and chloride ions bond together, they form a giant lattice structure known as sodium chloride or table salt (NaCl). The charges of all the ions add up to zero, giving the overall compound no charge.

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Ashraf
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Ato m s co m b i n i n g

4.3 The ionic bond


How sodium and chlorine atoms bond together
As you saw on page 49, a sodium atom must lose one electron, and a
chlorine atom must gain one, to obtain stable outer shells of 8 electrons.
So when a sodium atom and a chlorine atom react together, the sodium
atom loses its electron to the chlorine atom, and two ions are formed.
Here, sodium electrons are shown as  and chlorine electrons as :

sodium atom chlorine atom sodium ion, Na  chloride ion, Cl 


 

1 electron giving
Na Cl Na Cl
transfers

281 287 [28]  and [288] 


stable ion stable ion

The two ions have opposite charges, so they attract each other. The force
of attraction between them is strong. It is called an ionic bond. Bonding diagrams !
The ionic bond is the bond that forms between ions of opposite charge. To show the bonding clearly:
 use dots and crosses (o, •, and ×)
How solid sodium chloride is formed for electrons from atoms of
When sodium reacts with chlorine, billions of sodium and chloride ions different elements
 write the symbol for the element
form. But they do not stay in pairs. They form a regular pattern or lattice
in the centre of each atom.
of alternating positive and negative ions, as shown below. The ions are
held together by strong ionic bonds.

sodium chloride – a lattice of


alternating positive and negative ions,
held together by strong ionic bonds

sodium ion

chloride ion

The lattice grows to form a giant 3-D structure. It is called ‘giant’ because
it contains a very large number of ions. This giant structure is the
compound sodium chloride, or common salt.
Since it is made of ions, sodium chloride is called an ionic compound.
It contains one Na1 ion for each Cl2 ion, so its formula is NaCl.
The charges in the structure add up to zero:
the charge on each sodium ion is 11
  These polystyrene balls were given
the charge on each chloride ion is 12
opposite charges. So they are attracted to
total charge 0 each other, and cling together. The same
So the compound has no overall charge. happens with ions of opposite charge.
50

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