Day 9: Introduction to Carbon – Catenation and Tetravalency | Secondary Stage Science | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences
Carbon is the “Celebrity Element” of the Periodic Table! Despite making up only a tiny fraction of the Earth’s crust (0.02%), it forms the backbone of all life on Earth. Carbon’s unique superpower lies in its ability to form millions of compounds.
- Tetravalency: Carbon has 4 valence electrons. It needs 4 more to achieve stability.
- Catenation: Carbon atoms can link with each other to form long chains, branched chains, or rings.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Valency | $$4$$ (Tetravalent) |
| Bond Type | Covalent (Sharing) |
| Catenation Power | Forms $C-C-C$ long stable chains. |
Graphite in your pencil is just a giant network of carbon atoms. Because of catenation, these atoms form sheets that slide over each other, letting you write!
The LPG in your kitchen (Butane) consists of 4 carbon atoms linked in a chain. Without catenation, we wouldn’t have these energy-rich fuels.
With a parent, look around the kitchen and list 5 items that contain carbon (Hint: Sugar, Oil, Plastic containers, Vegetables).
Use 4 toothpicks and a clay ball (or marshmallow) to represent a Carbon atom’s 4 bonds. Try connecting multiple “atoms” to see how long a chain you can build!
That is wonderful my mother explanation is always the best and easiest for understand 👏♥️
That is wonderful my mother explanation is always the best and easiest for understand 👏♥️
It is so interesting
Good