Is the Conventional Wisdom of Energy and Bond Formation Always Accurate?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the concept of bond energy in chemistry, specifically the idea that energy is required to break a bond and that energy is released when a bond is formed. While this is a common understanding, it raises questions regarding unstable bonds that can break spontaneously. The conversation highlights that, by definition, a bond represents a lower energy state compared to unbound atoms, necessitating energy input to break it. Some bonds are easily broken due to low energy requirements, particularly in unstable configurations that can be influenced by environmental factors like heat. However, it is emphasized that all bond breaking involves energy, even if some molecules appear to break spontaneously due to a population of molecules having sufficient energy. The discussion concludes that the semantics of bond stability and energy input may lead to confusion, particularly when considering molecules influenced by external forces.
QuestionMarks
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Just double-checking myself on something:

Typically at the high-school level, we say that it takes energy to break a bond, but energy is released to form a bond. This has always bothered me because even with a naive understanding of enthalpies we can see formations with different signs. To me then, this conventional wisdom is a decent generalization only for stable bonds, but for molecules that spontaneously break, this wisdom is not so sound.

Sound alright?
 
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By definition, a bond involves a lower energy state the unbound state.
It follows that you need to supply energy to break a bond.

Some bonds are easily broken because the energy required is very low.
For instance, some combinations of atoms are unstable at room temperature because the hea in the room quickly supplies the energy needed to break the bond. It is also possible for a configuration to be finely balanced so the energy vs distance graph has a local minima on top of a global maxima ... thus, a small amount of energy input means that the configuration cannot come back together again.

Can you come up with an example of a molecule that spontaneously breaks without input of energy?
 
QuestionMarks said:
Sound alright?

No. Every bond means a depression in the potential energy landscape, to leave the depression you need to deliver the energy to jump from the depression. Unstable bonds have the depression very shallow, and as energy is not distributed uniformly between molecules it often happens that part of the population of molecules have enough energy for the unstable bond to be broken - but it doesn't mean it breaks without energy.
 
My problem then seems a poor choice of semantics as I'm willing to imagine a "molecule" effectively held together by some externally applied force (which would spontaneously break upon removal of that external energy)...but we would not call this a molecule.
 
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