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Electronegativity: bond character/bond type: electronegativity difference and predicting bond type 

Crash Chemistry Academy
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In this video: What is electronegativity, what is electronegativity difference and how is it related to predicting different bond types: non-polar covalent, polar covalent, and ionic; What are the divisions in the continuum from minimum electronegativity difference to maximum difference and where do those divisions come from; How is bond type related to molecular character in terms of non-polar to polar.
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Electronegativity from Wikipedia, November 2020
Electronegativity, symbol χ, measures the tendency of an atom to attract a shared pair of electrons (or electron density).[1] An atom's electronegativity is affected by both its atomic number and the distance at which its valence electrons reside from the charged nucleus. The higher the associated electronegativity, the more an atom or a substituent group attracts electrons.
On the most basic level, electronegativity is determined by factors like the nuclear charge (the more protons an atom has, the more "pull" it will have on electrons) and the number and location of other electrons in the atomic shells (the more electrons an atom has, the farther from the nucleus the valence electrons will be, and as a result the less positive charge they will experience-both because of their increased distance from the nucleus, and because the other electrons in the lower energy core orbitals will act to shield the valence electrons from the positively charged nucleus).
The opposite of electronegativity is electropositivity: a measure of an element's ability to donate electrons.
The term "electronegativity" was introduced by Jöns Jacob Berzelius in 1811,[2] though the concept was known before that and was studied by many chemists including Avogadro.[2] In spite of its long history, an accurate scale of electronegativity was not developed until 1932, when Linus Pauling proposed an electronegativity scale which depends on bond energies, as a development of valence bond theory.[3] It has been shown to correlate with a number of other chemical properties. Electronegativity cannot be directly measured and must be calculated from other atomic or molecular properties. Several methods of calculation have been proposed, and although there may be small differences in the numerical values of the electronegativity, all methods show the same periodic trends between elements.
The most commonly used method of calculation is that originally proposed by Linus Pauling. This gives a dimensionless quantity, commonly referred to as the Pauling scale (χr), on a relative scale running from 0.79 to 3.98 (hydrogen = 2.20). When other methods of calculation are used, it is conventional (although not obligatory) to quote the results on a scale that covers the same range of numerical values: this is known as an electronegativity in Pauling units.
As it is usually calculated, electronegativity is not a property of an atom alone, but rather a property of an atom in a molecule.[4] Properties of a free atom include ionization energy and electron affinity. It is to be expected that the electronegativity of an element will vary with its chemical environment,[5] but it is usually considered to be a transferable property, that is to say that similar values will be valid in a variety of situations.

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22 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 41   
@ser3nity6
@ser3nity6 5 месяцев назад
great video my teacher didnt go over this too much. thank you!
@elmtutch1992
@elmtutch1992 2 года назад
Veryy great video! Covered a lot of stuff and was a step by step guide to electronegativity! I ended up learning more than I thought I would! Thank you
@whirrrl3349
@whirrrl3349 2 года назад
Nice! Beautifully illustrated to drive home the concept. Thanks!
@aesarahypatia3482
@aesarahypatia3482 3 года назад
This is great. Thank you so much for posting. I love your channel!
@josiemoreau7049
@josiemoreau7049 2 года назад
to everyone watching this to study for their chem test, good luck
@ramachandrakiranaddala3337
@ramachandrakiranaddala3337 3 года назад
Thanks for making the concept clear.
@bubbahotep6316
@bubbahotep6316 3 года назад
Great lesson. Thanks!
@user-hk1wl4qr3m
@user-hk1wl4qr3m Год назад
nicely done! kudos! thanks so much.
@msjanktk4882
@msjanktk4882 9 месяцев назад
Nice and informative video.
@bahschemistry1111
@bahschemistry1111 3 года назад
Posted just in perfect timing for my class this week.
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 3 года назад
😊👍
@chemistrymattersgetit4161
@chemistrymattersgetit4161 3 года назад
still doing brilliant work! (keep it up)
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 3 года назад
Am trying! Thanks much for the comment.
@justtryna4318
@justtryna4318 2 года назад
Thanks a lot sir..
@fairycore7140
@fairycore7140 3 года назад
I love it!
@lumpyppp
@lumpyppp Год назад
soooo excellent
@st_nickelouse9219
@st_nickelouse9219 Год назад
abolutely AMAZING video
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy Год назад
Thanks!
@zoomrusher9598
@zoomrusher9598 3 года назад
very cool
@alam9756
@alam9756 3 года назад
U should be famous sir
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 3 года назад
😊
@JacobAbiola-ej4gr
@JacobAbiola-ej4gr Год назад
Amazing
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy Год назад
Thanks!
@miencyfratgyueev3
@miencyfratgyueev3 2 года назад
sick man
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 2 года назад
😐🙂😊😄
@jsjsjjsshw
@jsjsjjsshw 2 года назад
How does the electronegativity difference between atoms dictate how polar the bond formed is?
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 2 года назад
polarity is an uneven distribution of electrons in an otherwise neutral molecule (total # protons = total # electrons), making one side more negative, the other side more positive. Electronegativity gives the relative "pull" an atom has for electrons, so a more electronegative atom bonded to a less electronegative atom will have a greater amount of electrons around it, giving it a negative character, while the other atom, with less electrons, is more positive. The bigger the difference between that positive and negative, the more polar it is, and so the bigger the difference in electronegativity, the polar it is. You may want to see my video on polarity in molecules for more detail: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-72CQe-_PJU4.html
@jsjsjjsshw
@jsjsjjsshw 2 года назад
@@CrashChemistryAcademy thank you so much!
@ReassuringSmile
@ReassuringSmile 2 года назад
My mind is blown....
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 2 года назад
😃
@fukpoeslaw3613
@fukpoeslaw3613 3 года назад
so, what exactly is the macro property of polarity
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 3 года назад
For example water is polar. At the macro (every day) level, we see water attract to a variety of substances that have any kind of charge distribution, either large or small. However, C-H bonds, even though polar (non-zero electronegativity difference of 0.3), appear to manifest non-polar behavior, such as lipids--there are certainly other factors to account for, such as what other atoms are bonding as well as molecular shape, but that is basically what I was getting at.
@fukpoeslaw3613
@fukpoeslaw3613 3 года назад
@@CrashChemistryAcademy aha, I understand it now, thanks!
@alam9756
@alam9756 3 года назад
What’s the difference/Relation between polarity and conductivity
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 3 года назад
polarity refers to a distribution of charge within a molecule, whereas conductivity refers to the movement of charge. They are not quite related, but one connection would be bonded atoms with a large electronegativity difference (metal - non-metal) will often dissociate (split apart) when dissolved in water, creating positive and negative ions (charged particles) that can move in the water, which would allow them to carry an electric current through the water, and these are called electrolytes. It may help to watch my video on molecular polarity: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-72CQe-_PJU4.html
@alam9756
@alam9756 3 года назад
@@CrashChemistryAcademy bless you.. I already watched it
@mnadeemferoz-ow7xp
@mnadeemferoz-ow7xp 11 месяцев назад
Electronegativity differences between hydrogen and fluorine is 1.8 . But why the bond between hydrogen fluoride is considered to be covalent not ionic?
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 11 месяцев назад
Great question! The 1.7 boundary between covalent and ionic is ambiguous at best, the two bonding types transition from one to the other, without a concrete boundary. The determination of ionic or covalent becomes more of an empirical exercise depending on the conditions & environment the compound is in, and what aspect of the bonding you are interested in. So let's look at the conditions in which HF exists: Most significantly it is a gas at room temperature, the HF molecule is isolated and therefore little influenced by its environment, and so the sharing allowed by their electronegativities is fairly consistent. Hydrogen's electron does spend the majority of its time closer to the fluorine atom, but a significant amount of the electron's time is also spent around hydrogen. That is because at any given moment that the electron is lost to fluorine, the hydrogen atom is a completely unshielded proton-- there are no other electrons in the hydrogen atom to repel that lone valence electron, and so the hydrogen exists as a naked positive charge and is easily able to momentarily grab back its lost electron. If you were to freeze HF into a solid, the bond would likely exhibit more ionic behavior. The multiple fluorine atoms close by would exert a larger attractive force, likely keeping hydrogen's valence electron away from the hydrogen atom for longer moments of time. Conversely, when solid ionic compounds are vaporized, they normally exist in the gaseous state as their empirical formula. For example, vaporized sodium chloride exists as individual NaCl "molecules" and in fact the NaCl bond takes on a more slightly covalent character in that gaseous diatomic state. I hope that answers your question!
@thea-kl1rz
@thea-kl1rz Год назад
hi primez
@returnofthemomos
@returnofthemomos 3 года назад
first
@CrashChemistryAcademy
@CrashChemistryAcademy 3 года назад
OWEN! I thought you left. Glad you're back.
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