Electronegativity: Predicting Bond Formation
- The differences in Pauling electronegativity values can be used to predict whether a bond is covalent or ionic in character
Electronegativity & covalent bonds
- Single covalent bonds are formed by sharing a pair of electrons between two atoms
- In diatomic molecules the electron density is shared equally between the two atoms
- Eg. H2, O2 and Cl2
- Both atoms will have the same electronegativity value and have an equal attraction for the bonding pair of electrons leading to formation of a covalent bond
- The equal distribution leads to a non-polar molecule
The electronegativity values are equal resulting in the formation of a nonpolar covalent bond
Electronegativity & ionic bonds
- When atoms of different electronegativities form a molecule, the shared electrons are not equally distributed in the bond
- The more electronegative atom (the atom with the higher value on the Pauling scale) will draw the bonding pair of electrons towards itself
- A molecule with partial charges forms as a result
- The more electronegative atom will have a partial negative charge (delta negative, δ-)
- The less electronegative atom will have a partial positive charge (delta positive, δ+)
- This leads to a polar covalent molecule
The electronegativity values are not equal - polar bond forms
- If there is a large difference in electronegativity of the two atoms in a molecule, the least electronegative atom’s electron will transfer to the other atom
- This in turn leads to an ionic bond – one atom transfers its electron and the other gains that electron
- The cation is a positively charged species which has lost (an) electron(s)
- The anion is a negatively charged species which has gained (an) electron(s)
Large differences in electronegativity values lead to the formation of ionic bonds
Examiner Tip
You can use the Pauling scale to decide whether a bond is polar or nonpolar: