3.1.3 - Bonding
3.1.3 - Bonding
3.1.3 - Bonding
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1.3 - Bonding
Key Terms
Melting: The change of state from solid to liquid. Temperature that this
occurs = the melting point (m.p.)
• Energy is taken in when a substance melts to overcome bonds or
intermolecular forces. The stronger the forces or bonds in a substance,
the greater the energy required to melt the substance.
Boiling: change of state from liquid to gas. Temperature that this occurs
= the boiling point (b.p.)
• Energy is taken in when a substance boils. The stronger the bonds or
intermolecular forces in a liquid substance, the greater the energy
required to boil the substance.
Ionic Bonding
Lattice: a regular repeated 3-D arrangement of atoms, ions or molecules
in a crystalline solid.
Ionic bonding: The electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged
ions in an ionic lattice. These ions are formed by electrons being
transferred from one atom to another.
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E.g. NaCl: The ions line up with every +ve ion surrounded by —ve
ions and vice versa.
Hardness
Ionic compounds are hard, because the anions &
cations are strongly attracted to each other
therefore difficult to separate. However, when
force is applied to an ionic solid, ions of like
charge may be forced closer to each other. The
electrostatic repulsion can be enough to split
the solid completely; this is which is why ionic
solids are also brittle. (see the figure left)
• Importantly, the smaller the ions (in terms of actual size) and the
higher the charge on the ions, the stronger the ionic bond.
• If this is true, a super high-melting-point ionic compound would be a
group 2 / group 6 pairing (2-, 2+), from the top of the respective
groups. They would be small and highly charged; it would have a higher
M.P. than a group 1 / group 7 combination, even if the two ions came
from the top of group 1 and 7.
Electrical Conductivity
In general…
For anything to conduct electricity, they must satisfy the 2 criterion:
1. The substance must contain charged particles.
2. The charged particles must be free to move throughout the substance.
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Solubility
- Ionic compounds are polar molecules, this means they tend to dissolve
in polar solvents, such as water (this is true for any solute / solvent
pairing, you learn it in the chromatography section)
- When moving water molecules hit an ionic lattice, they can knock ions
off the outer layers.
- The water molecules then surround the ions, causing the substance to
break up and dissolve.
- However, for some ionic substances (like aluminium oxide) the
electrostatic forces of attraction are so strong that water cannot
break up the lattice—There’s not enough energy. This means the compound
is insoluble in water.
E.g. Ammonium
E.g. Hydroxium
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Hardness
Relatively soft as they do not have strong intermolecular forces.
Electrical Conductivity
Covalent things do not conduct electricity; covalent things don’t contain
any charged particles which are free to move. (the criteria discussed
before!)
Solubility
They’ll dissolve in non-polar solvents, because they themselves are not
polar. This means they will not dissolve in water. Your typical solvent
will be some non-polar organic substances.
Electrical Conductivity
Does not conduct electricity as it does not contain any charged particles which are free to
move.
Solubility
Dissolves in non-polar solvents ∴ will not dissolve in water but dissolves in organic
substances.
E.g. Diamond
• Hardest naturally occurring substance; it’s used
for drill tips and cutting glass. (more
properties below)
• Every carbon atom makes 4 bonds to other carbon
atoms in a tetrahedral arrangement. The bond
angles are 109.5° (more on this later!)
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E.g. 2 Graphite
• Lubricant and used in pencils:
- The individual sheets of graphite are strong due to covalent bonds.
- But forces between the sheet (van der Waals forces) are very weak.
- So sheets slide over each other easily.
- Given graphite’s lubricant properties allowing it to work in pencils.
• Electrical Conductivity:
- Carbon has 4 valence (outer) electrons…
- So it normally makes 4 covalent
bonds.
- In graphite each carbon is bonded
to only 3 others.
- The remaining valence electron on
each atom is delocalised and can
move freely within the sheet.
- This means that graphite conducts
electricity! (magic)
Electrical Conductivity
There are no charged particles, since the lattice particles are atoms, so
giant covalent crystals are insulators. Graphite is an exception to this
rule because it has a ‘spare electron’. It doesn’t really break the rule
as an electron IS a charged particle and in graphites case, it can move!
Solubility
These lot are insoluble. All the strong covalent bonds of the giant
covalent structure need to be broken to free the atoms and let them move
through the solvent. That’s not happening…
Metallic Bonding
Next up, metallic bonding: it’s the electrostatic attraction between
metal cations (metal positive ions, cat means +) delocalised electrons in
a lattice. You’ll hear the word ‘delocalised sea of electrons’ a lot from
the GCSE days. That’s sea and some positive ions is what’s going on here.
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Metallic Structure
1) Particles of the 3-D lattice are positive ions surrounded by a ‘sea’
of delocalised electrons.
2) The positive ions are held together by metallic bonding; metallic
bonding literally is the electrostatic attraction between metal
cations and the associated delocalised electrons. EASY
E.g. Magnesium
Hardness
Metals are typically hard, due to strong electrostatic attraction between
metal cations and delocalised electrons. (this seems to be the answer to
a lot of things)
Something to note:
• The greater the number of delocalised electrons per atom, the
stronger the metallic bond so therefore the higher the m.p./ b.p.
• The smaller the ions in the metallic lattice, the stronger the
attraction between the delocalised electrons + the cations therefore
the higher the m.p./b.p.
• Transition metals have much higher m.p./b.p. than the main group
metals (group 1 and 2) due to the large number of d sub-shell
electrons. These bad boys may become delocalised, creating an even
stronger metallic bond.
• This principle (smaller ion + more charge = stronger bond is the
same as the ionic bonding principle)
Conductivity
• Metals have delocalised electrons in their structures, these can move.
As we’ve said a trillion times, an electric current = the movement of
charged particles.
• Heat is conducted when particles can move and are close enough together
(think friction when you rub your hands together) to pass the heat
energy from one to another. The delocalised electrons enable heat
energy to be passed through the metal because they’re nice and close.
So metals are good conductor of heat.
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Solubility
(I tried to get this on the same page, sorry) Metals are Insoluble,
except in other liquid metals. This is, again, because of the
strength of metallic bonds. (Chemistry really does have all the
answers)
Malleable + Ductile
Because of the layered structure of the lattice, metallic layers
can slide over each other without disrupting the bonding. This
makes metals malleable (this means they can be shaped, try
hitting your mums car with a hammer… actually don’t) they’re
also ductile (this means you can draw them out into a wire, like
the copper wires that are powering the computer you’re reading
this on… unless you printed it out, wierdo).
Shapes of Molecules
The molecule or ion will take up a shape which minimises electron pair
repulsions. The shape of the molecule is determined from:
• The total amount of electron pairs around a central atom.
• The amount of (sets of) bonding pairs of electrons.
• The amount of lone pairs of electrons.
A molecular diagram
showing the shape of
methane:
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Central atoms with 2 electron pairs
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seesaw shape (where the lone pair is always positioned where one of the
trigonal planar atoms would be in a trigonal bipyramidal molecule) + bond
angles are 102° + 89° to minimise repulsions. E.g. Sulfur tetrafluoride,
SF4
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Intermolecular Forces
These are forces that DON’T require the exchange of an electron. They
exist because of bonds, they aren’t bonds themselves. They exist (as the
name implies) between molecule. After reading this section, it’ll all
make sense.
Bond Polarity
Electronegativity: the power of an atom to attract the pair of electrons
in a covalent bond.
Trends in Electronegativity
In the periodic table, the following trends in electronegativity are
observed (they make sense really)
1) Electronegativity goes up across a period. This is because…
• atomic radius goes down across a period, giving a progressively
stronger attraction between the positive nucleus and the 2 electrons
in the covalent bond.
• nuclear charge goes up across a period. This will cause a greater
attraction for the electrons in the covalent bond.
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Permanent Dipoles
Dipole: a difference in electronegativity between 2 atoms caused by a
shift in electron density in the bond. That sounds fancy, just read
below:
• If charge is distributed
unevenly over a whole
molecule, then the molecule
will have a permanent
dipole. Molecules that have
permanent dipoles = polar
molecules. Whether or not a
molecule is polar depends
on whether it has any polar bonds + its overall shape.
• In simple molecules, e.g. H-Cl, the one polar bond means charge is
distributed unevenly across the whole molecule, so it has a permanent
dipole.
• In complicated molecules, the shape of the molecule will decide whether
or not it has an overall permanent dipole.
- If the polar bonds are arranged symmetrically so that dipoles cancel
each other out, then the molecule has no permanent dipole + is non-
polar. This is generally the case for equal polar bonds arranged in
linear, trigonal planar, tetrahedral or octahedral arrangements.
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- If the polar bonds are arranged so that they all point roughly in the
same direction + they don’t cancel each other out, then charge will
be arranged unevenly across the whole molecule = molecule has a
permanent dipole + is polar.
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Hydrogen bonding
Stronger than induced + permanent dipole-dipole forces. Hydrogen bonds
occur between a δ+ H atom which is covalently bonded to O, N or F of one
molecule + the lone pair of electrons of an O, N or F atom of another
molecule.
• O, N + F are very electronegative, so they draw the bonding electrons
away from the hydrogen atom.
• This causes the bond to be very polarised, + because hydrogen has such
a high charge density due to its small size, the hydrogen atoms form
weak bonds w/ lps on F, N or O atoms of other molecules.
• Only O-H and N-H groups are found in covalent molecules as H-F is only
found in hydrogen fluoride.
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The hydrogen bonds between water molecules explain many of its
physical properties…
Higher boiling point + melting point than would be expected for group 6
hydrides:
• The ↑ seen from H2S ➜ H2Se ➜ H2Te is caused by an ↑ in the van der
Waals forces of attraction. As you descend group 6, each atom has more
electrons so the induced dipoles increases. Hence van der Waals forces
between molecules increase.
• It would be expected based on the other hydrides that water should have
a very low b.p. - this would be the case if the only intermolecular
forces between water molecules were van der Waals forces of attraction
+ permanent dipole-dipole forces.
• However, the hydrogen bonds between water molecules mean that it
requires much more energy to break the bonds, hence giving it a higher
b.p. + m.p.
The pattern repeats for the group 5 + 7 hydrides but not for the group 4
hydrides, as CH4 = non-polar.
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