Why Does BeF2 Have Covalent Bonds Despite Being an Ionic Compound?

  • Thread starter Thread starter mcfaker
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Ionic
AI Thread Summary
BeF2 is typically classified as an ionic compound due to its composition of beryllium (a metal) and fluorine (a non-metal), which suggests the presence of cations and anions. However, despite the significant electronegativity difference between beryllium and fluorine, BeF2 exhibits covalent characteristics, making it an exception to the usual rules governing ionic bonding. This phenomenon highlights that electronegativity differences greater than 2.0 do not always guarantee ionic bonding, as some compounds, including BeF2, can behave differently. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding that chemical bonding can be more complex than simple rules suggest. Ultimately, BeF2 is recognized as a molecular compound with covalent bonds despite its ionic classification.
mcfaker
Messages
43
Reaction score
0
Is BeF2 an Ionic compound??

Hi,

Be is a metal & F is a non-metal. this means its an ionic compound made of cations & anions.
Non-metals form molecular compounds which consist of molecules ( and molecules always contain covalent bonds).

Now if BeF2 is an ionic compound, why does it have a covalent bond? Thats just crazy because the electronegative value of Be is 1,5 and the one of F is 4! This means an ionic bond must be formed!

Can someone please explain, because I am really confused. Thanks in advance!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You are a victim of rules of thumb. They work - unless they don't.

There is nothing wrong with the logic you presented - yes, in the perfect world we would expect BeF2 to be highly ionic. Unfortunately, reality is full of imperfections.
 
Thank you for answering!, now I can read on because of your answer. Then how do I know if ts going to be an ionic bond or a covalent? The change of electronegativity must be bigger than what value to become an ionic substance?

Thanks much appreciated!
 
mcfaker said:
Thank you for answering!, now I can read on because of your answer. Then how do I know if ts going to be an ionic bond or a covalent? The change of electronegativity must be bigger than what value to become an ionic substance?

You are asking for another rule of thumb. I told you there was nothing wrong with your approach, some substances just don't care about our rules. BeF2 is one of them, other notable example is anhydrous AlCl3.

Heck, even anhydrous FeCl3 is covalent enough to sublimate.

To put it another way: you have correctly expected BeF2 to be ionic. You just have to be prepared to be occasionally wrong.
 
So please confirm me if I am right:
The substance BeF2 is a molecular compound with covalent bonds even though there is a difference in electronegativity greater than 2.0 which normally implies that an ionic bond is formed. There is no ionic bond in BeF2 so its not an ionic compound.

So overall this is an exception to the rule that suggests that if the difference in Electronegative values is greater than 2.0 an ionic bond will be formed.

Am I correct?
 
mcfaker said:
overall this is an exception to the rule that suggests that if the difference in Electronegative values is greater than 2.0 an ionic bond will be formed.

Yes.
 
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
Back
Top