HONORS CHEMISTRY Section 6.1 – Introduction to Chemical Bonding
Chemical Bonding Objectives Define chemical bond Explain why most atoms form chemical bonds and the ideas behind electronegativity Describe covalent and ionic bonding
Bonding Holds atoms together in compounds It is a mutual electrical attraction between: Nuclei Valence Electrons Why? Lower Potential Energy Greater Stability
Formation of a Bond
Types of Bonds Ionic – attraction between cations and anions Results from exchange of valence electrons Covalent – sharing of valence electrons Polar Non-polar
Comparison of Ionic vs. Covalent Bonding
The Reality of Bonding Usually not purely ionic or covalent Not perfectly equal sharing of electrons Not total exchange of electrons Electrons equally shared – non-polar covalent Electrons not equally shared – polar covalent Electrons mostly or exclusively around one atom - ionic Determined by electronegativity difference
Electronegativity and Bonding Video
Ionic Character If you have > 50% Ionic Character the Bond is Ionic (∆ electronegativity > 1.7) If you have < 50% Ionic Character the Bond is Covalent (∆ electronegativity 1.7 or less) If you have < 5% Ionic Character the Bond is Non-Polar Covalent (∆ electronegativity is < 0.3) If you have between 5% and 50% Ionic Character the bond is Polar Covalent (∆ electronegativity is > 0.3 and < 1.7)
Polar vs. Non-polar Video
Bonding HCl Cl – H = 3.0 – 2.1 = 0.9 Polar Covalent Bond H – electrons are further away δ + Cl – electrons are closer δ -
Practice Elements ∆ Electronegativity Bond TypeMore Negative Element C-H C-S O-H Na-Cl Cs-S