bonding Questions and Answers
Ionic bonding – answer the strong electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged
ions
which two factors affect the strength of an ionic bond? – answer ionic charge
ionic radius (greater distance between ions = weaker bond)
describe the trend in ionic radius down a group – answer radius increases as atomic
radius increases
describe the trend in ionic radius for isoelectronic ions – answer ionic radius decreases
as atomic number increases because greater effective nuclear charge means stronger
attraction between nucleus and outer shell of electrons - 'pulls' in outer electrons
describe a procedure to show the migration of ions in copper (II) sulfate solution -
answer- electrolyse a solution of copper sulfate in a U-tube
- solution around cathode turns blue as Cu2+ ions are attracted to the negative charge
describe a procedure to show the migration of ions in potassium manganate (VII) -
answer- draw a faint pencil line across a piece of filter paper and moisten it with tap
water
- fasten the filter paper to a microscope slide with crocodile clips
- use tweezers to place a small crystal of potassium manganate (VII) in the centre of the
filter paper
- connect the crocodile clips to the terminals of a 20V DC supply, noting which clip is
connected to which terminal
- after 15 minutes, a purple colour spreads towards the side of the filter paper
connected to the positive terminal of the power supply due to the negatively charged
MnO4- ions being electrostatically attracted to the positive terminal
covalent bond - answerthe electrostatic attraction between two nuclei and the pair of
electrons they share
two types of covalent bond - answersigma and pi
, what is a sigma bond? - answerhead on/direct overlap of atomic orbitals, resulting in an
area of electron density which is symmetrical about the axis between the nuclei
e.g. in H2, Cl2 or HCl
what is a pi bond? - answersideways overlap of p orbitals that occurs in a double or
triple bond
what is a dative covalent bond? - answera covalent bond in which a shared pair of
electrons is supplied by one of the bonding atoms only to form a bond with an electron-
deficient atom
chemically the same as any other covalent bond
positive charge is distributed all over the ion and all the bonds are equivalent
how is a dative covalent bond represented? - answeran arrow pointing away from the
atom that donates the pair of electrons
the Octet Rule - answerthe tendency in bonding of atoms to form an 'octet' (8 electrons
in outer shell)
two ways the octet rule breaks down - answer1. electron deficient molecules
2. expansion of the octet
what happens if molecules are electron deficient? - answerdative covalent bonds form
between adjacent molecules
describe the dative covalent bonding in beryllium chloride, BeCl2 - answerthe Be atom
is electron deficient (only 4 electrons in outer shell)
in order for the Be outer shell to be filled, a lone electron pair from Cl is shared with a
Be atom from another molecule, forming a dative covalent bond
chained polymer is formed
describe the dative covalent bonding in aluminium trichloride - answerthe aluminium
atom in the molecule is electron deficient (only 6 electrons in outer shell)
when solid aluminium chloride is heated it sublimes to form a vapour consisting of the
dimer Al2Cl6 because pairs of AlCl3 molecules bond together
a lone electron pair from a chlorine atom in one molecule bonds dative covalently with
aluminium from another molecule and so fills the aluminium outer shell