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Pure covalent bonding? |
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| Jun11-12, 03:20 PM | #1 |
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Pure covalent bonding?
Hi,
If two atoms of the same element form a bond together, would the bond be purely covalent or would it have a small ionic character as well ? If it does have an ionic character please explain why. Thanks |
| Jun14-12, 02:20 PM | #2 |
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Well pure covalent is a term used to describe little or no difference between the electronegativity of the atoms forming a bond.Since the atoms are identical,the net dipole moment is 0,so the bond is described as purely covalent.
p.s.bonds in some compunds may vary a lot.Hence Aluminium halides.AlF3 is ionic,AlCl3 is ionic as a solid and covalent as a gas,while AlI3 is covalent. |
| Jun14-12, 03:51 PM | #3 |
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The bond would generally be considered purely covalent, though you'd need to evaluate the local environment (i.e., ALL the bonds around each member of the bonding pair) to ascertain whether the bond can be polarized and thus have some degree of ionic character.
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| Jun23-12, 08:13 PM | #4 |
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Pure covalent bonding?
In "The Nature of the Chemical Bond," Pauling says that the ionic structures of H2 (H-(1)H+(2) and H+(1)H-(2)) each contribute about 2% to stabilization energy of the H2 molecular bond. I don't know enough about his calculations to know how those percentages were determined and if someone could add that information, I'd really like to know. However, the short approximate reason is that all resonance structures must be used in determining the stabilization energy of the molecular bonds. And so even seemingly "totally covalent" molecules have a bit of ionic character.
I hope this answers your question and isn't totally outdated. |
| Jun24-12, 10:40 PM | #5 |
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http://www.amazon.com/Chemists-Guide...=AG56TWVU5XWC2 for an example. |
| Jun24-12, 10:56 PM | #6 |
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Thanks for the clarification EM. I didn't realize that was still valence bond theory. It feels different from the valence bond theory that was taught way back in O-chem, and I didn't realize it could be used in calculations for H2.
On the subject of covalence, in inorganic compounds, the covalence of a metal-ligand bond can be measured by the hyperfine coupling of an unpaired spin with the metal center. Is there anyway to measure the covalence in the bonds of a diamagnetic, organic compound? Or are these bonds generally considered to be totally covalent? |
| Jun26-12, 03:38 AM | #7 |
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Recognitions:
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The problem is that it is quite hard to define what "covalent" really means for two atoms at bonding distance. E.g. in the example of the valence bond treatment of the H2 molecule the contribution of ionic structures depends strongly on the choice of the atomic orbitals. If these are chosen to be orthogonal to each other, consideration of the covalent structure only won't lead to bonding and bonding is only obtained when resonance with ionic structures is included.
A more rigorous definition of "non-ionic" bond is possible on the basis of Bader's "atoms in molecule" definition: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atoms_in_molecules |
| Jul1-12, 10:12 PM | #8 |
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