CHEM 2 Chemistry in Your World 2nd Edition Hogg Solutions Manual 1
CHEM 2 Chemistry in Your World 2nd Edition Hogg Solutions Manual 1
CHEM 2 Chemistry in Your World 2nd Edition Hogg Solutions Manual 1
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in part.
Chapter 5 CHEM2
6. The octet rule says that atoms lose and gain electrons to reach the nearest noble gas electron
configuration. Sodium, 2-8-1, would lose one electron to achieve the 10 electron neon noble
gas electron configuration, 2-8. A nonmetal like oxygen, 2-6, would gain two electrons to
achieve the 2-8 electron configuration of neon.
7. Definition/description
a. A hydrocarbon is a compound consisting only of carbon and hydrogen.
b. a compound consisting only of carbon and hydrogen with only single bonds
c. a compound consisting only of carbon and hydrogen with one or more multiple bonds
between carbon atoms
d. Alkenes are hydrocarbons with one or more carbon-carbon double bonds.
8. A Ca3+ ion is not possible because the energy required to remove a third electron is much
greater than the energy available in chemical reactions. This third electron would need to
come from the set of electrons in the noble gas 2-8-8 electron configuration for argon.
9. Predict the ions
a. Br1−
b. Al3+
c. Nal+
d. Ba2+
e. Ca2+
f. Ga3+
g. I1−
h. S2-
i. Group 1A atoms lose one valence electron to form a +1 ion, see 9c above.
j. Group 7A atoms have seven valence electrons and gain one to form a 1- ion, see 9g.
10. An ion with 12 protons and 10 electrons will have a +2 charge; magnesium has 12 protons,
Mg2+. The number of protons stays the same. The number of protons exceeds the number of
electrons by 2.
11. Formulas and names
a. AlI3 aluminum iodide
b. SrCl2 strontium chloride
c. Ca3N2 calcium nitride
d. K2S potassium sulfide
e. Al2S3 aluminum sulfide
f. Li3N lithium nitride
12. Electrostatic attractions between positive and negative ions in an ionic lattice hold the solid
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CHEM2 Instructor’s Manual
together. These attractions are not limited to the nearest ions. The example is a NaCl lattice.
Each ion is attracted to all the oppositely charged ions in the lattice. The attraction decreases
as the distance between oppositely charged ions increases.
13. Nomenclature
a. calcium sulfate
b. sodium phosphate
c. sodium bicarbonate
d. potassium hydrogen phosphate
e. sodium nitrite
f. copper(II) nitrate
14. Variants
a. water or dihydrogen monoxide
b. molecular oxygen or dioxide
c. hydrogen peroxide or dihydrogen dioxide
15. Formulas
a. Lithium is in Group 1A so it forms the Li1+ ion. Tellurium is in Group 6A and forms the
Te2− ion. The formula for the neutral ionic combination is Li2Te.
b. MgBr2
c. Ga2S3
16. a. CaCl2
b. SrCO3
c. Mg(OH)2
d. Fe2O3
e. K2PO4
17. a. With a ratio of three telluride anions for every two bismuth cations, the most likely
formula is Bi2Te3.
b. Bismuth cations have a +3 charge, so for bismuth telluride to be electrically neutral, the
telluride anion must have a charge of –2.
18. Because the ammonium cation has a charge of +1, the charge of the perchlorate anion must
be –1 for the compound to be electrically neutral.
19. a. (NH4)3PO4
b. Na2SO4
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Chapter 5 CHEM2
c. CuCl2
d. Cr(NO3)3
e. KBr
f. CaCO3
g. NaClO
20. Ionic bonds differ from covalent because of the differences in the kinds of atoms that are
bonded. Ionic bonds are formed between atoms of widely different electron attracting power;
the more electron attracting atom gains one or more electrons to become a negative ion and
the less electron attracting atom loses one or more electrons to become a positive ion.
Covalent bonds are formed between atoms of similar electron attracting power; the two
atoms share one or more pairs of electrons to give complete octets; neither atom gains or
loses a whole electron. Metals typically combine with nonmetals to form ionic bonds while
nonmetals and nonmetals combine to form covalent bonds.
21. Types of bonding
a. ionic
b. covalent
c. ionic
d. covalent
e. covalent
22. Inorganic compounds
F O Cl S Br Se
Na NaF Na2O NaCl Na2S NaBr Na2Se
K KF K2O KCl K2S KBr K2Se
B BF3 B2O3 BCl3 B2S3 BBr3 B2Se3
Al AlF3 Al2O3 AlCl3 Al2S3 AlBr3 Al2Se3
Ga GaF3 Ga2O3 GaCl3 Ga2S3 GaBr3 Ga2Se3
C CF4 CO2 CCl4 CS2 CBr4 CSe2
Si SiF4 SiO2 SiCl4 SiS2 SiBr4 SiSe2
23. Formulas and names
a. NO, nitrogen monoxide
b. SO3, sulfur trioxide
c. N2O, dinitrogen oxide
d. NO2, nitrogen dioxide
24. a. Covalent, nitrogen tribromide
b. Ionic, zinc iodide
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CHEM2 Instructor’s Manual
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Chapter 5 CHEM2
a. b. c. d.
e. f. g. h.
26. Ionic bonding exists between oppositely-charged ions. The polar covalent bond exists
between atoms that share electrons unequally. The nonpolar bonding exists between atoms
that share electrons equally (atoms with similar attractions for electrons).
27. Shapes
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Chapter 5 CHEM2
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CHEM2 Instructor’s Manual
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Chapter 5 CHEM2
58. Octane, C8H18, should have a boiling point between the boiling points for heptane, C7H16;
98.4°C and nonane, C9H20; 150°C. The boiling points can be assumed to increase by a
regular amount with every additional CH2 unit. The boiling point increased by 29.7°C when
the molecule size increased from hexane to heptane. From heptane to nonane the boiling
point change is 52.4°C. The boiling point for octane should be about halfway between the
heptane and nonane boiling points. This would make it about 26-30°C more than 98.4°C. A
boiling point in the range of 124-128°C for octane is a reasonable answer.
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