Are All Charged Molecules Polar and Can Polar Molecules Be Uncharged?

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All charged molecules are inherently polar due to their unequal distribution of positive and negative charges. However, polar molecules can exist in both charged and uncharged forms, as their polarity is determined by differences in electronegativity and molecular symmetry. The discussion highlights that H2+ is considered non-polar, with the electron's behavior described in terms of resonance forms, where it is equally likely to be associated with either hydrogen atom. In quantum mechanics, the electron is viewed as occupying an orbital that symmetrically spans both hydrogen nuclei, illustrating the complexity of molecular polarity and charge distribution.
christian0710
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Hi,
Is it correctly understood that all charged molecules are polar (if they have a charge at some point, they must also have a unequal distribution of positivity and negativity)

but polar molecules can be charged or uncharged ( they have Δelectronegativity)
 
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You have to take into account symmetry. I'm pretty sure that H2+ is non-polar!
 
Ahh yes that makes sense! thank you :)
So in the case of H2(+) I could imagine there are (if one can say) two resonance form, where 50% of the time the electron is most at Hydrogen A and the other 50% most at hydrogen B.
 
In a simple classical picture, yes. Quantum mechanically, you just have to see the electron as being in an orbital that stretches symetrically over the two hydrogen nuclei.
 
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