How do you know or figure out if a chemical bond between several atoms is polar?
1 Answer
A polar bond is defined when the difference in the electronegativity of 2 atoms is roughly between 0.5 and 2.0
Explanation:
Electronegativity is a property of atoms and describes how strongly an atom attracts the electrons toward the nucleus.
So, for example, an H-F molecule.
The electronegativity for the hydrogen atom is 2.1
The electronegativity of the F atom is 4.1
The difference is therefore 4.1-2.1=2.0
2.0 is roughly a polar bond.
This means that the electrons are pulled towards the F-atom more strongly than towards the Hydrogen atom. This results in the F atom being more negative (attracts the electrons stronger) than the H atom. The electrons are not placed in the middle of the two atoms, but far more to the side of the F-atom.
This gives the F atom a partial negative charge and the H atom a partial positive charge.
- <0.5 nonpolar bond
- 0.5-2.0 polar bond
- 2.0< ionic bond
The borders of these definitions are rough.