2.types of Bonding - Covalent and Metallic Bonding - UPDATED
2.types of Bonding - Covalent and Metallic Bonding - UPDATED
2.types of Bonding - Covalent and Metallic Bonding - UPDATED
If the atoms that form a covalent bond are identical, as in H2, Cl2, and other diatomic
molecules, then the electrons in the bond must be shared equally. We refer to this as
a pure covalent bond. Electrons shared in pure covalent bonds have an equal
probability of being near each nucleus
Polar covalent bond
• When the atoms linked by a covalent bond are
different, the bonding electrons are shared, but no
longer equally.
▫ Instead, the bonding electrons are more attracted to
one atom than the other, giving rise to a shift of
electron density toward that atom.
▫ This unequal distribution of electrons is known as
a polar covalent bond, characterized by a partial
positive charge on one atom and a partial negative
charge on the other.
• The atom that attracts the electrons more
strongly acquires the partial negative charge and
vice versa.
▫ For example, the electrons in the H–Cl bond of a
hydrogen chloride molecule spend more time near
the chlorine atom than near the hydrogen atom.
▫ Thus, in an HCl molecule, the chlorine atom
carries a partial negative charge and the hydrogen
atom has a partial positive charge.
Polar covalent
• Atoms with different electronegativities
▫ Separation of charge
E.g
H2O
Using lines to represent the bonds, the coordinate bond could be drawn more
simply as:
• Carbon monoxide
▫ CO has a triple bond that consists of:
Two covalent bonds between the carbon and oxygen
atoms
One dative covalent bond using a lone pair on the
oxygen atom:
Macromolecules
• Covalent compounds
• Atoms arranged in crystalline pattern
▫ Each atom → covalently bonded to neighboring
atoms
E.g graphite, diamond → C-atom at lattice point
▫ Giant molecules
High MPs and BPs
Metallic bond
• Metals tend to have high melting points and boiling
points suggesting strong bonds between the atoms.
• Metallic bonding is often described as an array of
positive ions in a sea of electrons.
• The metallic bond is the electrostatic
attraction between these free-moving
(delocalised) electrons and positive metal cations.
Metallic bond
• Is a metal made up of atoms or ions?
▫ It is made of atoms.
▫ Each positive center in the diagram represents all
the rest of the atom apart from the outer electron,
but that electron has not been lost - it may no longer
have an attachment to a particular atom, but it's still
there in the structure.
▫ Sodium metal is therefore written as Na, not Na+.
Metallic bond
• The Electron Sea Model:
▫ Positive atomic nuclei (brown circles) surrounded
by a sea of delocalized electrons (yellow circles).
• Use the sea of electrons model to explain why
Magnesium has a higher melting point (650 °C)
than sodium (97.79 °C).
▫ Magnesium has two outer shell electrons.
▫ Both of these electrons become delocalized, so the
"sea" has twice the electron density as it does in
sodium.
The remaining "ions" also have twice the charge and so
there will be more attraction between "ions" and "sea".
Thus, metallic bond strength is directly proportional to
the number of mobile electrons
▫ Magnesium atoms also have a slightly smaller radius
than sodium atoms, and so the delocalized electrons
are closer to the nuclei
Metallic bond strength increases with decreasing size of
metal atom
Molten metals
• What about metallic bond in molten metals?
▫ Metallic bond is still present
▫ But, ordered structure has been broken down