GROUP 5 non-metals → gain 3 electrons → −3 ions (N³⁻, P³⁻)
GROUP 6 non-metals → gain 2 electrons → −2 ions (O²⁻, S²⁻)
GROUP 7 non-metals → gain 1 electron → −1 ions (F⁻, Cl⁻, Br⁻, I⁻)
The OVERALL CHARGE of an ionic compound must be ZERO — positive and negative charges balance.
For MgCl₂: Mg²⁺ needs 2 Cl⁻ to balance (2+ and 2×1− = 0). ✓
For Al₂O₃: 2 Al³⁺ (6+) needs 3 O²⁻ (6−) to balance. ✓
⚠️ Common Mistake
The IONIC BOND is the electrostatic attraction between OPPOSITELY charged ions — NOT the transfer of electrons itself. The transfer creates the ions; the attraction between them IS the bond. Also: ionic compounds always have an overall charge of ZERO — the positive and negative charges must balance.
📌 Key Note
Ionic bonding: metal loses electrons → positive ion. Non-metal gains electrons → negative ion. Opposite charges attract → ionic bond. Both achieve full outer shells. Group number tells you charge: Group 1 → +1, Group 7 → −1 etc. Overall compound charge = zero.
🎯 Matching Activity — Match the Ion to its Charge
Match each element to the ion it forms and why. — drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.
Sodium (Group 1)
Drop here
Magnesium (Group 2)
Drop here
Chlorine (Group 7)
Drop here
Oxygen (Group 6)
Drop here
Aluminium (Group 3)
Drop here
Mg²⁺ — loses 2 electrons to achieve noble gas configuration
Cl⁻ — gains 1 electron to achieve noble gas configuration
Na⁺ — loses 1 electron to achieve noble gas configuration
Al³⁺ — loses 3 electrons to achieve noble gas configuration
O²⁻ — gains 2 electrons to achieve noble gas configuration
🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. When sodium (2.8.1) reacts with chlorine (2.8.7) to form NaCl, what happens?
2. What is the formula of calcium chloride? (Calcium is Group 2, Chlorine is Group 7)
⭐ How Well Do You Understand This Topic?
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