Chemistry SL
Chemistry SL
6
Chapters
243
Notes
Chapter 1 - Models Of The Particulate Nature Of Matter
Chapter 1 - Models Of The Particulate Nature Of Matter
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chapter 3 - Classification Of Matter
Chapter 3 - Classification Of Matter
Chapter 4 - What Drives Chemical Reactions?
Chapter 4 - What Drives Chemical Reactions?
Chapter 5 - How Much, How Fast & How Far?
Chapter 5 - How Much, How Fast & How Far?
Chapter 6 - What Are The Mechanisms Of Chemical Change?
Chapter 6 - What Are The Mechanisms Of Chemical Change?
IB Resources
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chemistry SL
Chemistry SL

Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure

Understanding Ionic Lattices: Dive Into Compound Properties

Word Count Emoji
394 words
Reading Time Emoji
2 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Lattices in ionic crystals

  • A lattice is like the architectural blueprint of an ionic crystal. Imagine a skyscraper, with its floors, offices, and rooms all laid out in a predictable pattern. Similarly, a lattice is a three-dimensional grid where ions hold a meetup party, keeping an orderly arrangement that continues indefinitely.
  • The arrangement of the ions is like guests at a party – they depend on their size (think tall and short guests) and charge (imagine guests wearing red and blue, representing positive and negative charge).

Empirical formula of ionic compounds

  • Ionic compounds give out their identity card as an empirical formula. This tells us the simplest ratio of the different types of ions in the structure.
  • For instance, sodium chloride (NaCl) says it's a 1:1 party – for every sodium ion (Na+), there's a chlorine ion (Cl-) rocking out. Even if you are looking at a single grain of salt, which can host a quadrillion ions, the 1:1 ratio remains the same.

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IB Resources
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chemistry SL
Chemistry SL

Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure

Understanding Ionic Lattices: Dive Into Compound Properties

Word Count Emoji
394 words
Reading Time Emoji
2 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Lattices in ionic crystals

  • A lattice is like the architectural blueprint of an ionic crystal. Imagine a skyscraper, with its floors, offices, and rooms all laid out in a predictable pattern. Similarly, a lattice is a three-dimensional grid where ions hold a meetup party, keeping an orderly arrangement that continues indefinitely.
  • The arrangement of the ions is like guests at a party – they depend on their size (think tall and short guests) and charge (imagine guests wearing red and blue, representing positive and negative charge).

Empirical formula of ionic compounds

  • Ionic compounds give out their identity card as an empirical formula. This tells us the simplest ratio of the different types of ions in the structure.
  • For instance, sodium chloride (NaCl) says it's a 1:1 party – for every sodium ion (Na+), there's a chlorine ion (Cl-) rocking out. Even if you are looking at a single grain of salt, which can host a quadrillion ions, the 1:1 ratio remains the same.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Chemistry SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟