Chemical Compounds = Ionic Bonds?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the nature of chemical bonds and the distinction between ions and atoms in compounds. It clarifies that not all compounds consist of ions; rather, compounds can be made up of neutral atoms, particularly in covalent bonds where atoms share electrons. Electronegativity plays a crucial role in determining whether a bond is ionic or covalent, with varying electron attraction among elements influencing bond types. Ionization refers to the process of atoms or molecules gaining or losing electrons, which alters their chemical properties. The term "ionized water" likely refers to "de-ionized water," a highly purified form of water with removed impurities, rather than implying that water is fundamentally ionic. Overall, the conversation emphasizes that while ionic bonds involve charged particles, covalent compounds maintain neutral atoms.
Mr_Bojingles
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From what I gather both ionic and covalent bonds transform all the elements involved into ions. Does that mean every chemical compound that exists consists of ions and not atoms or are there chemical compounds that are made of pure unionized atoms?

Also when they speak of ionized water what do they mean? If all compounds are made of ions why would a hydrogen oxygen compound be any different?
 
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Mr_Bojingles said:
From what I gather both ionic and covalent bonds transform all the elements involved into ions. Does that mean every chemical compound that exists consists of ions and not atoms or are there chemical compounds that are made of pure unionized atoms?

The overall idea deals with electronegativity. Basically, some elements have more "electron attraction power" than others. Electronegativity varies from element to element.

It is incorrect to say that compounds consist of ions. An ion is an individual atom or molecule that has a distinct charge (i.e. has extra electrons or is missing electrons). Compounds may have ionic bonds, but this does not mean that the atoms are ions (or will even become ions). The measure of electronegativity of a bond determines if it is covalent, ionic or somewhere in between.

The only compound that is completely covalent is one where the atoms involved all have the same elecronegativity (usually identical atoms)
 
Its still a bit vague to me. When they speak of ionizing radiation which ionizes matter by stripping away one or more electrons do they just mean that they unstabilize matter and change the chemical properties of it?

For example if nitrous oxide is bombarded with alpha or beta particles until it loses electrons will that change the effects nitrous oxide has on the brain as an anasthetic or drug?
 
Mr_Bojingles said:
From what I gather both ionic and covalent bonds transform all the elements involved into ions. Does that mean every chemical compound that exists consists of ions and not atoms or are there chemical compounds that are made of pure unionized atoms?

Also when they speak of ionized water what do they mean? If all compounds are made of ions why would a hydrogen oxygen compound be any different?

Covalent compounds consist of covalent bond characters they are not ionic in nature. When there's more or less a separation of charges the compound is essentially together by the net attraction of the opposite charges on the elements that are involved.

"They" probably meant 'de-ionized' water, which has an appropriated dielectric constant as well as total organic carbon content. It's a very pure form of water, with metals as well as carbon based compounds filtered from it.
 
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