Ionic Bonds
Madiosn Fondren, Haley Wiseman 4th IPC
Chemical Bonds: Covalent vs. Ionic
Chemistry 4.3 Metallic Bonding
Ionic bond
The definition of ionic bond is when a positively charged ion forms a bond with a negatively charged ions and one atom transfers electrons to another. An example of an ionic bond is the chemical compound Sodium Chloride.
inoic bonds
ionic bonds
Covalent Bond
A covalent bond is a chemical bond that involves the sharing of electron pairs between atoms. These electron pairs are known as shared pairs or bonding pairs, and the stable balance of attractive and repulsive forces between atoms, when they share electrons, is known as covalent bonding.
Covalent bond vs. ionic
In ionic bonding, atoms transfer electrons to each other. Ionic bonds require at least one electron donor and one electron acceptor. In contrast, atoms with the same electronegativity share electrons in covalent bonds, because neither atom preferentially attracts or repels the shared electrons.
covalent bond
metallic bond
metallic bond
A microscopic model of metals. Definition 1:Metallic bond. Metallic bonding is the electrostatic attraction between the positively charged atomic nuclei of metal atoms and the delocalised electrons in the metal. Figure 1: Positive atomic nuclei (+) surrounded by delocalised electrons (•)