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Grade 10 Science
Chapters

1Course overview and scientific literacy

2Careers in science and pathways

3Branches and interrelationships of science

4Climate versus weather and Earth's climate system

5Mechanisms of heat transfer and global circulation

6Greenhouse effect, gases and climate modeling

7Climate change indicators and human contributions

8Biodiversity, biomes and ecological sampling

9Population dynamics, food webs and ecological balance

10Biogeochemical cycles and feedback mechanisms

11Sustainability, stewardship and Indigenous perspectives

12Chemical reactions fundamentals and lab practice

13Acids, bases, pH and practical applications

14Chemical nomenclature, formulas and conservation

Periodic table and valence electronsIonic versus covalent bondingNaming common ionic compoundsPolyatomic ions and compound namingNaming molecular compounds with prefixesWriting chemical formulas from namesBalancing chemical equationsClassifying reaction types by equationSubscripts versus coefficients explainedImportance of IUPAC and nomenclature systems

15Reaction rates, collision model and applications

Courses/Grade 10 Science/Chemical nomenclature, formulas and conservation

Chemical nomenclature, formulas and conservation

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Use the periodic table and valence concepts to name and write formulas for common ionic and molecular compounds, classify substances, and balance chemical equations to demonstrate conservation of mass.

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Periodic table and valence electrons

Periodic Table and Valence Electrons Explained — Grade 10
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Periodic Table and Valence Electrons Explained — Grade 10

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Periodic Table & Valence Electrons — Your Grade 10 Survival Guide

"If atoms threw parties, valence electrons are the ones standing in the doorway deciding who gets in."

You're already comfortable with acids, bases, neutralization and titrations — great. Now, let's zoom out and meet the people who run the show: the elements on the periodic table and their valence electrons. Understanding these makes naming compounds, writing formulas and trusting conservation laws feel less like guesswork and more like a cheat code.


What this section is about (and why it follows acids & bases)

You used neutralization to make salt and water (HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H2O). To understand why NaCl forms and why water has the formula H2O, we need the periodic table and valence electrons. Those electrons explain:

  • Why some atoms give electrons (ionic bonds) and some share them (covalent bonds)
  • How to predict the formulas of compounds (NaCl, MgCl2, CO2)
  • How conservation of mass/electrons governs chemical reactions (no magic atoms lost)

This is the bridge between "I mixed A and B" and "I can predict the product and balance the equation."


Quick map: Periodic table patterns you actually need

  • Groups (columns) show elements with similar valence electron counts. That means similar chemistry.
  • Periods (rows) show energy levels (how many shells). Not needed in depth right now.
  • Metals (left) tend to lose electrons. Nonmetals (right) tend to gain or share electrons.

Common group rules (handy cheat sheet):

  • Group 1 → 1 valence electron → usually forms +1 ions (Na+, K+)
  • Group 2 → 2 valence electrons → usually forms +2 ions (Mg2+, Ca2+)
  • Group 13 → 3 valence electrons → often +3
  • Group 14 → 4 valence electrons → can share (C in covalent molecules)
  • Group 15 → 5 valence electrons → commonly -3 in ionic compounds (N3-)
  • Group 16 → 6 valence electrons → commonly -2 (O2-)
  • Group 17 → 7 valence electrons → halogens → commonly -1 (Cl-, Br-)
  • Group 18 → 8 valence electrons (except He) → noble gases, usually inert

Remember: transition metals (middle block) can have variable charges — we'll keep them simple for Grade 10.


Valence electrons: the chemistry VIPs

Valence electrons are the electrons in the outermost shell of an atom. They determine how an element bonds.

Why they matter:

  • Stability goal: Most atoms try to reach an octet (8 valence electrons) — the stable noble-gas configuration.
  • Ionic bonding: Atoms transfer electrons to achieve octets. Think: a metal gives, a nonmetal receives.
  • Covalent bonding: Atoms share electrons when both need more to reach octet (common with nonmetals).

Micro explanation — Lewis dots: Represent valence electrons as dots around the symbol. Na· (one dot) and ····Cl (seven dots). When Na gives its dot to Cl, you get Na+ and Cl- → NaCl.

Example: Sodium and Chlorine

  • Na (Group 1): 1 valence electron → wants to lose 1 → Na+
  • Cl (Group 17): 7 valence electrons → wants to gain 1 → Cl-
  • Combine: Na+ + Cl- → NaCl (neutral compound)

From valence to formulas — step-by-step

  1. Find group numbers for each element to know valence electrons.
  2. Decide likely charges: metals → positive; nonmetals → negative. Use: charge ≈ (group number subtracted from 8) for nonmetals.
  3. Balance charges so total positive = total negative.
  4. Write the empirical formula (simplest whole-number ratio).

Examples:

  • Magnesium + Chlorine

    • Mg (Group 2) → Mg2+
    • Cl (Group 17) → Cl-
    • Need two Cl- to balance one Mg2+ → MgCl2
  • Aluminum + Oxygen

    • Al3+ and O2- → lowest common multiple 6 → Al2O3
  • Carbon + Oxygen (covalent)

    • Carbon wants 4, oxygen wants 2 → CO2 (carbon shares 4 electrons total, two with each oxygen)

Ionic vs Covalent — the punchline table (simple)

  • Ionic: metal + nonmetal, electrons transferred, forms crystals, high melting points, conducts electricity when molten/aqueous.
  • Covalent: nonmetal + nonmetal, electrons shared, forms molecules, lower melting points, generally don't conduct.

Why it matters for acids/bases: Many neutralization products are ionic salts (NaCl). Predicting which salt forms uses the same valence-electron logic.


Conservation of mass and electrons — chemistry's accounting rules

  • Conservation of mass: Atoms aren't created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. The atoms rearrange.
  • Conservation of charge/electrons: In ionic processes, electrons moved are accounted for — total charge remains balanced.

Example (neutralization, tie to earlier topic):

HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H2O

  • Look at atoms: left side has 1 Na, 1 Cl, 1 O, 2 H — right side matches. No atoms lost.
  • Look at electrons/charges: H+ (from HCl) combines with OH- (from NaOH) to form H2O. Na+ pairs with Cl- to make NaCl. Charges balanced throughout.

Balancing equations is just bookkeeping of atoms (and implicit electrons for ionic processes). If you mastered titration stoichiometry, this is the same skill applied to atomic counts.


Quick practice (do this in your head like a mini-quiz)

  1. Predict formula: Calcium (Group 2) + Fluorine (Group 17) → ? (Answer: CaF2)
  2. Predict formula: Aluminum + Sulfur → ? (Answer: Al2S3)
  3. Name the compound CO2 — is it ionic or covalent? (Covalent; both nonmetals)

Why these work: same valence-charge balancing rules.


Safety note (linking back to acids/bases)

When you handle NaOH, HCl, or other reagents used in neutralization/titrations, you’re dealing with ions that form predictable salts. Knowing the valence-based product helps you plan safe disposal and storage — e.g., neutralizing an acid with a base creates a salt and water, but that salt might still be hazardous.


Key takeaways (the stuff you should be able to explain to a friend)

  • Valence electrons determine how atoms bond: lose, gain, or share.
  • Periodic table groups give you a quick read on valence counts and likely ionic charges.
  • Write formulas by balancing charges; write names after you know the formula.
  • Conservation ensures atoms and charge are tracked — nothing disappears in reactions.

Final memorable insight:

"Think of the periodic table like a dating app: elements swipe right when valence electrons match — sometimes they transfer a friend (ionic), sometimes they just share a Netflix account (covalent). Chemistry is just relationship drama on a tiny scale."


Quick homework (1–2 minutes each)

  • Draw Lewis dot structures for Na, Cl, O, and C and show how NaCl and H2O form.
  • Predict formulas and names for: K + O; Fe (use Fe2+) + O; N + H.

Go on, impress someone by explaining why salt is literally the evidence of electrons finding new homes.

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