Is an ionic bond stronger than a comparable covalent bond? If not, then why do ionic compounds typically have higher melting points than covalent compounds?
1 Answer
Nope, ionic bonds are generally weak (and intramolecular) bonds. The electrons are poorly shared (in fact, we say they are mostly transferred instead of shared), which is the opposite of what an ideal chemical bond is supposed to be (even electron sharing).
The less covalent a bond is, the weaker the bond is, for the same point of comparison.
BOND-BREAKING (INTRAMOLECULAR)
Here's an example.
