Substances in which 2 or more elements are chemically combined
Types of strong chemical bonds
Ionic
Covalent
Metallic
Ionic bonding
Particles are oppositely charged ions
Occurs in compounds formed from metals combined with non-metals
Covalent bonding
Particles are atoms which share pairs of electrons
Occurs in most non-metallic elements and in compounds of non-metals
Metallic bonding
Particles are atoms which share delocalised electrons
Occurs in metallic elements and alloys
Formation of ionic bond
1. Metal atom loses electrons to become positively charged ion
2. Non-metal atom gains electrons to become negatively charged ion
An ion is an atom that has lost or gained electron(s)
Ions produced by metals in Groups 1 and 2 and by non-metals in Groups 6 and 7 gain full outer shell of electrons, so they have the same electronic structure as a noble gas (Group 0 element)
Ionic compounds
Giant structure of ions
Held together by strong electrostatic forces of attraction between oppositely charged ions
Forces act in every direction since the structure is in 3D
Covalent bonding
Atoms share one or more pairs of electrons
intermolecular forces
Small molecules with covalent bonds
HCl
H2
O2
Cl2
NH3
CH4
Polymers
Large covalently bonded molecules
Giant covalent structures (macromolecules)
Consist of many atoms covalently bonded in a lattice structure
Examples: diamond, silicon dioxide
Metallic bonding
Positive ions (atoms that have lost electron(s)) and delocalised electrons arranged in a regular pattern
delocalised electron system consists of the electrons 'lost' from the atoms to form positive ions
Delocalised electrons are free to move through the structure
Delocalised electrons are shared through the structure so metallic bonds are strong