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Electronegativity + – 0 0 H Cl H H
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The basic units: ionic vs. covalent
Ionic compounds form repeating units. Covalent compounds form distinct molecules. Consider adding to NaCl(s) vs. H2O(s): Cl Na Cl H O Na Cl Cl Na Na H O H O NaCl: atoms of Cl and Na can add individually forming a compound with million of atoms. H2O: O and H cannot add individually, instead molecules of H2O form the basic unit.
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I’m not stealing, I’m sharing unequally
We described ionic bonds as stealing electrons In fact, all bonds share – equally or unequally. Note how bonding electrons spend their time: H2 HCl LiCl H Cl [Li]+ [ Cl ]– H + – 0 + – covalent (non-polar) polar covalent ionic
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I’m not stealing, I’m sharing unequally
Point: the bonding electrons are shared in each compound, but are not always shared equally. The greek symbol indicates “partial charge”.
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Electronegativity Electronegativity is “a number that describes the relative ability of an atom, when bonded, to attract electrons”. The periodic table has electronegativity values. We can determine the nature of a bond based on EN (electronegativity difference). EN = higher EN – lower EN Example NBr3: EN = 3.0 – 2.8 = 0.2 (for all 3 bonds).
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Electronegativity a EN Again, it is a grey scale not black and white
below 0.5 = covalent = polar covalent above 1.7 = ionic Again, it is a grey scale not black and white Determine the EN and bond type for these: HCl, CrO, Br2, H2O, CH4, KCl
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Electronegativity Answers
HCl: 3.0 – 2.1 = polar covalent CrO: 3.5 – 1.6 = 1.9 ionic Br2: 2.8 – 2.8 = 0 covalent H2O: 3.5 – 2.1 = 1.4 polar covalent CH4: 2.5 – 2.1 = 0.4 covalent KCl: 3.0 – 0.8 = 2.2 ionic
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Homework Read pg in textbook
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