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Chemical Bonding (A level) - H2 Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

Covalent Bonding and Compounds

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

Covalent Bond

Defini­tion: strong electr­ostatic attraction between positive nuclei of 2 atoms and bonding electrons shared between them
Proper­ties: bond is formed by the sharing of electrons. electr­one­gat­ivity difference between both atoms in the covalent compound is small (<1.6)
formation of a covalent bond involves the overla­pping of valence orbitals of the atoms. different ways of overla­pping results in different types of bonds (namely sigma and pi bond)
head on overlap of s orbitals/p orbitals/ s and p orbital results in the formation of a sigma bond. electrons are concen­trated between the nuclei of the bonding atoms
when 2 p orbitals that are parallel to each other overlap sideways , this forms a pi bond. electrons are concen­trated above and below the plane of the nuclei of the bonding atoms
pi bond is weaker than a sigma bond/ in all multiple bonds, only 1 bond will be a sigma bond and the rest will be pi bonds
the relative weakness of pi bonds compared to sigma bonds is due to their lesser extent of overlap between atomic orbitals, more diffuse electron density, and increased exposure to the surrou­nding enviro­nment.

Dative Covalent Bond

bond formed when only one atom contri­butes the two bonding electrons
involves 1 electron donor (have at least an extra lone pair of electrons to donate) and 1 electron acceptor (have at least an empty orbital to accept the electron pair
repres­ented as A:->B(A donated the electrons and B accepted them)
common example: dimeri­sation of aluminium chloride

Dimeri­sation of AlCl3 ( aluminium chloride)

Bond polarity

describes how electrons are shared between atoms in a covalent bond (shifting of the electron cloud)
non-polar bonds (X-X,C­-H,P-H) : negligible difference in electr­one­gat­ivity, electron cloud shared equally
polar bond: atoms have relatively different electr­one­gat­ivi­ties. The more electr­one­gative atom will attract the shared paired electrons towards itself more than the less electr­one­gative atom. electron cloud will shift towards the more electr­one­gative atom
polari­sation: seperation of positive and negative charges ( in a polar bond, the more electr­one­gative atom will have a partially negative charge whereas the less electr­one­gative atom will have a partially positive charge
compounds with this type of covalent bond are said to behave ionically
dipole moment (indicate difference between electr­one­gat­ivities of the atoms bonded together (arrow points from PP to PN)
partially negative charge is not the same as negative charge (each used for different types of bonding)

Strength of a covalent bond

the more the bond energy, the stronger the covalent bond
bond energy: the energy absorbed when a mole of a particular covalent bond between 2 atoms in the gaseous state is broken
factors affecting bond energy: bond order, bond length
bond order: number of covalent bonds between 2 atoms (as bond order increases, bond energy increases, the more stronger the bond)
bond length: distance between the nuclei of the bonded atoms (as the radius of the bonded atoms increases, bond length increases, bond energy decreases, the weaker the bond
 

Covalent Compounds

most covalent compounds have a simple molecular structure, whereas some covalent compounds (diamond, graphite, silicon, SiO2) have a giant covalent structure
simple molecular structure: strong covalent bonds between atoms, weak interm­ole­cular forces between molecules. covalent compounds with this type of structure exist as simple discrete molecules
giant covalent compounds: strong covalent bonds between atoms. These strong covalent bonds exists extens­ively throughout the structure

Diamond

C atoms are arranged tetrah­edr­ally, where 1 C atom uses all its 4 valence electrons to form 4 single covalent bonds with 4 other C atoms
very hard due to C atoms being held in a fixed tetrah­edral arramg­ement with strong covalent bonds between C atoms
poor electrical conductor as each C atom is fully bonded to 4 other C atoms covalently (localised in the covalent bonds), leaving behind no deloca­lised electrons to carry charge
insoluble as a lot of energy is required to overcome the strong covalent bonds between atoms
high mp/bp: a lot of energy required to overcome strong covalent bonds between atoms

Graphite

C atoms are hexago­nally arranged in flat parallel layers. weak instan­taneous dipole­-in­duced dipole attraction between parallel hexagonal layers
Each C atom uses only 3 valence electrons to form 3 single covalent bonds with only 3 other C atoms. the fourth valence electron from each C atom is deloca­lised over all C atoms in the same layer
good electrical conduc­tivity in the direction parallel to the hexagonal layers of C atoms -> deloca­lised electrons along the layer can carry charge
insoluble as a lot of energy is required to overcome the strong covalent bonds between atoms
high mp/bp: a lot of energy required to overcome strong covalent bonds between atoms
soft: hexagonal layers are held by weak instan­taneous dipole­-in­duced dipole attraction -> weak enough to allow the layers to slide over one anothe­r(g­raphite is used as a lubricant)

Silicon

each Si atom forms 4 single covalent bonds with 4 other Si atoms in a tetrah­edral arrang­ement
silicon is a semico­nductor : Electr­icity does not conduct in this pure monocr­yst­alline silicon, when silicon is doped with impurities it becomes conduc­tive. But silicon does not have conduc­tivity comparable to conduc­tors, it is very less but much more than that of insulators which is why it is called a semico­ndu­ctor.

SiO2 (Silicon Dioxide)

Each Si atom forms 4 single covalent bonds with 4 oxygen atoms in tetrah­edral arrang­ement. Each O atom forms 2 single covalent bonds with 4 O atoms
Each O atom forms 2 single covalent bonds with 2 Si atoms
Hence the ratio of Si:O -> 1:2
poor conductor of electr­icity, high mp
crysta­llized: quartz/ impure : sand

Simple Molecular structure

most covalent compounds have a simple molecular structure
hence most covalent compounds exist as simple discrete molecules
strong covalent bonds between atoms, weak interm­ole­cular force between molecules (when heat is supplied, imf is overcome before covalent bonds)
low mp/bp: little energy required to overcome weak interm­ole­cular forces of attraction between molecules
poor electrical conduc­tivity: there are no mobile charge carriers (deloc­alised electrons) present in simple covalent molecules in all states
exception: some polar molecules such as HCl may dissociate in water to form H+ and Cl- ions (polar molecules behave ionically)
solubi­lity: polar molecules are soluble in polar solvents/ non polar molecules are soluble in non polar solvents