Upozornenie: Prezeranie týchto stránok je určené len pre návštevníkov nad 18 rokov!
Zásady ochrany osobných údajov.
Používaním tohto webu súhlasíte s uchovávaním cookies, ktoré slúžia na poskytovanie služieb, nastavenie reklám a analýzu návštevnosti. OK, súhlasím









A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

Covalent compound
 
A covalent bond forming H2 (right) where two hydrogen atoms share the two electrons

A covalent bond is a chemical bond that involves the sharing of electrons to form electron pairs between atoms. These electron pairs are known as shared pairs or bonding pairs. The stable balance of attractive and repulsive forces between atoms, when they share electrons, is known as covalent bonding.[1] For many molecules, the sharing of electrons allows each atom to attain the equivalent of a full valence shell, corresponding to a stable electronic configuration. In organic chemistry, covalent bonding is much more common than ionic bonding.

Covalent bonding also includes many kinds of interactions, including σ-bonding, π-bonding, metal-to-metal bonding, agostic interactions, bent bonds, three-center two-electron bonds and three-center four-electron bonds.[2][3] The term covalent bond dates from 1939.[4] The prefix co- means jointly, associated in action, partnered to a lesser degree, etc.; thus a "co-valent bond", in essence, means that the atoms share "valence", such as is discussed in valence bond theory.

In the molecule H
2
, the hydrogen atoms share the two electrons via covalent bonding.[5] Covalency is greatest between atoms of similar electronegativities. Thus, covalent bonding does not necessarily require that the two atoms be of the same elements, only that they be of comparable electronegativity. Covalent bonding that entails the sharing of electrons over more than two atoms is said to be delocalized.

History

Early concepts in covalent bonding arose from this kind of image of the molecule of methane. Covalent bonding is implied in the Lewis structure by indicating electrons shared between atoms.

The term covalence in regard to bonding was first used in 1919 by Irving Langmuir in a Journal of the American Chemical Society article entitled "The Arrangement of Electrons in Atoms and Molecules". Langmuir wrote that "we shall denote by the term covalence the number of pairs of electrons that a given atom shares with its neighbors."[6]

The idea of covalent bonding can be traced several years before 1919 to Gilbert N. Lewis, who in 1916 described the sharing of electron pairs between atoms[7] (and in 1926 he also coined the term "photon" for the smallest unit of radiant energy). He introduced the Lewis notation or electron dot notation or Lewis dot structure, in which valence electrons (those in the outer shell) are represented as dots around the atomic symbols. Pairs of electrons located between atoms represent covalent bonds. Multiple pairs represent multiple bonds, such as double bonds and triple bonds. An alternative form of representation, not shown here, has bond-forming electron pairs represented as solid lines.[8]

Lewis proposed that an atom forms enough covalent bonds to form a full (or closed) outer electron shell. In the diagram of methane shown here, the carbon atom has a valence of four and is, therefore, surrounded by eight electrons (the octet rule), four from the carbon itself and four from the hydrogens bonded to it. Each hydrogen has a valence of one and is surrounded by two electrons (a duet rule) – its own one electron plus one from the carbon. The numbers of electrons correspond to full shells in the quantum theory of the atom; the outer shell of a carbon atom is the n = 2 shell, which can hold eight electrons, whereas the outer (and only) shell of a hydrogen atom is the n = 1 shell, which can hold only two.[9]

While the idea of shared electron pairs provides an effective qualitative picture of covalent bonding, quantum mechanics is needed to understand the nature of these bonds and predict the structures and properties of simple molecules. Walter Heitler and Fritz London are credited with the first successful quantum mechanical explanation of a chemical bond (molecular hydrogen) in 1927.[10] Their work was based on the valence bond model, which assumes that a chemical bond is formed when there is good overlap between the atomic orbitals of participating atoms.

Types of covalent bonds

Atomic orbitals (except for s orbitals) have specific directional properties leading to different types of covalent bonds. Sigma (σ) bonds are the strongest covalent bonds and are due to head-on overlapping of orbitals on two different atoms. A single bond is usually a σ bond. Pi (π) bonds are weaker and are due to lateral overlap between p (or d) orbitals. A double bond between two given atoms consists of one σ and one π bond, and a triple bond is one σ and two π bonds.[8]

Covalent bonds are also affected by the electronegativity of the connected atoms which determines the chemical polarity of the bond. Two atoms with equal electronegativity will make nonpolar covalent bonds such as H–H. An unequal relationship creates a polar covalent bond such as with H−Cl. However polarity also requires geometric asymmetry, or else dipoles may cancel out, resulting in a non-polar molecule.[8]

Covalent structures

There are several types of structures for covalent substances, including individual molecules, molecular structures, macromolecular structures and giant covalent structures. Individual molecules have strong bonds that hold the atoms together, but generally, there are negligible forces of attraction between molecules. Such covalent substances are usually gases, for example, HCl, SO2, CO2, and CH4. In molecular structures, there are weak forces of attraction. Such covalent substances are low-boiling-temperature liquids (such as ethanol), and low-melting-temperature solids (such as iodine and solid CO2). Macromolecular structures have large numbers of atoms linked by covalent bonds in chains, including synthetic polymers such as polyethylene and nylon, and biopolymers such as proteins and starch. Network covalent structures (or giant covalent structures) contain large numbers of atoms linked in sheets (such as graphite), or 3-dimensional structures (such as diamond and quartz). These substances have high melting and boiling points, are frequently brittle, and tend to have high electrical resistivity. Elements that have high electronegativity, and the ability to form three or four electron pair bonds, often form such large macromolecular structures.[11]

One- and three-electron bonds

Lewis and MO diagrams of an individual 2e- bond and 3e- bond

Bonds with one or three electrons can be found in radical species, which have an odd number of electrons. The simplest example of a 1-electron bond is found in the dihydrogen cation, H+
2
. One-electron bonds often have about half the bond energy of a 2-electron bond, and are therefore called "half bonds". However, there are exceptions: in the case of dilithium, the bond is actually stronger for the 1-electron Li+
2
than for the 2-electron Li2. This exception can be explained in terms of hybridization and inner-shell effects.[12]

The simplest example of three-electron bonding can be found in the helium dimer cation, He+
2
. It is considered a "half bond" because it consists of only one shared electron (rather than two);[13] in molecular orbital terms, the third electron is in an anti-bonding orbital which cancels out half of the bond formed by the other two electrons. Another example of a molecule containing a 3-electron bond, in addition to two 2-electron bonds, is nitric oxide, NO. The oxygen molecule, O2 can also be regarded as having two 3-electron bonds and one 2-electron bond, which accounts for its paramagnetism and its formal bond order of 2.[14] Chlorine dioxide and its heavier analogues bromine dioxide and iodine dioxide also contain three-electron bonds.

Molecules with odd-electron bonds are usually highly reactive. These types of bond are only stable between atoms with similar electronegativities.[14]

Modified Lewis structures with 3e bonds
Nitric oxide
Dioxygen

Resonance

There are situations whereby a single Lewis structure is insufficient to explain the electron configuration in a molecule and its resulting experimentally-determined properties, hence a superposition of structures is needed. The same two atoms in such molecules can be bonded differently in different Lewis structures (a single bond in one, a double bond in another, or even none at all), resulting in a non-integer bond order. The nitrate ion is one such example with three equivalent structures. The bond between the nitrogen and each oxygen is a double bond in one structure and a single bond in the other two, so that the average bond order for each N–O interaction is 2 + 1 + 1/3 = 4/3.[8]

Aromaticity

In organic chemistry, when a molecule with a planar ring obeys Hückel's rule, where the number of π electrons fit the formula 4n + 2 (where n is an integer), it attains extra stability and symmetry. In benzene, the prototypical aromatic compound, there are 6 π bonding electrons (n = 1, 4n + 2 = 6). These occupy three delocalized π molecular orbitals (molecular orbital theory) or form conjugate π bonds in two resonance structures that linearly combine (valence bond theory), creating a regular hexagon exhibiting a greater stabilization than the hypothetical 1,3,5-cyclohexatriene.[9]

In the case of heterocyclic aromatics and substituted benzenes, the electronegativity differences between different parts of the ring may dominate the chemical behavior of aromatic ring bonds, which otherwise are equivalent.[9]

Hypervalence

Certain molecules such as xenon difluoride and sulfur hexafluoride have higher co-ordination numbers than would be possible due to strictly covalent bonding according to the octet rule. This is explained by the three-center four-electron bond ("3c–4e") model which interprets the molecular wavefunction in terms of non-bonding highest occupied molecular orbitals in molecular orbital theory and resonance of sigma bonds in valence bond theory.[15]

Electron deficiency

In three-center two-electron bonds ("3c–2e") three atoms share two electrons in bonding. This type of bonding occurs in boron hydrides such as diborane (B2H6), which are often described as electron deficient because there are not enough valence electrons to form localized (2-centre 2-electron) bonds joining all the atoms. However the more modern description using 3c–2e bonds does provide enough bonding orbitals to connect all the atoms, so that the molecules can instead be classified as electron-precise.

Each such bond (2 per molecule in diborane) contains a pair of electrons which connect the boron atoms to each other in a banana shape, with a proton (the nucleus of a hydrogen atom) in the middle of the bond, sharing electrons with both boron atoms. In certain cluster compounds, so-called four-center two-electron bonds also have been postulated.[16]

Quantum mechanical description

After the development of quantum mechanics, two basic theories were proposed to provide a quantum description of chemical bonding: valence bond (VB) theory and molecular orbital (MO) theory. A more recent quantum description[17] is given in terms of atomic contributions to the electronic density of states.

Comparison of VB and MO theories

The two theories represent two ways to build up the electron configuration of the molecule.[18] For valence bond theory, the atomic hybrid orbitals are filled with electrons first to produce a fully bonded valence configuration, followed by performing a linear combination of contributing structures (resonance) if there are several of them. In contrast, for molecular orbital theory a linear combination of atomic orbitals is performed first, followed by filling of the resulting molecular orbitals with electrons.[8]

The two approaches are regarded as complementary, and each provides its own insights into the problem of chemical bonding. As valence bond theory builds the molecular wavefunction out of localized bonds, it is more suited for the calculation of bond energies and the understanding of reaction mechanisms. As molecular orbital theory builds the molecular wavefunction out of delocalized orbitals, it is more suited for the calculation of ionization energies and the understanding of spectral absorption bands.[19]

At the qualitative level, both theories contain incorrect predictions. Simple (Heitler–London) valence bond theory correctly predicts the dissociation of homonuclear diatomic molecules into separate atoms, while simple (Hartree–Fock) molecular orbital theory incorrectly predicts dissociation into a mixture of atoms and ions. On the other hand, simple molecular orbital theory correctly predicts Hückel's rule of aromaticity, while simple valence bond theory incorrectly predicts that cyclobutadiene has larger resonance energy than benzene.[20]

Although the wavefunctions generated by both theories at the qualitative level do not agree and do not match the stabilization energy by experiment, they can be corrected by configuration interaction.[18] This is done by combining the valence bond covalent function with the functions describing all possible ionic structures or by combining the molecular orbital ground state function with the functions describing all possible excited states using unoccupied orbitals. It can then be seen that the simple molecular orbital approach overestimates the weight of the ionic structures while the simple valence bond approach neglects them. This can also be described as saying that the simple molecular orbital approach neglects electron correlation while the simple valence bond approach overestimates it.[18]

Modern calculations in quantum chemistry usually start from (but ultimately go far beyond) a molecular orbital rather than a valence bond approach, not because of any intrinsic superiority in the former but rather because the MO approach is more readily adapted to numerical computations. Molecular orbitals are orthogonal, which significantly increases the feasibility and speed of computer calculations compared to nonorthogonal valence bond orbitals.

Covalency from atomic contribution to the electronic density of states

In COOP,[21] COHP[22] and BCOOP,[23] evaluation of bond covalency is dependent on the basis set. To overcome this issue, an alternative formulation of the bond covalency can be provided in this way.

The mass center of an atomic orbital with quantum numbers for atom A is defined as

where is the contribution of the atomic orbital of the atom A to the total electronic density of states of the solid

where the outer sum runs over all atoms A of the unit cell. The energy window is chosen in such a way that it encompasses all of the relevant bands participating in the bond. If the range to select is unclear, it can be identified in practice by examining the molecular orbitals that describe the electron density along with the considered bond.

The relative position of the mass center of levels of atom A with respect to the mass center of levels of atom B is given as


čítajte viac o Covalent_compound


čítajte viac na tomto odkaze: Covalent compound



Hladanie1.

Covalent (disambiguation)
File:Covalent bond hydrogen.svg
Hydrogen atom
Electron
Chemical bond
Electrons
Electron pair
Atom
Electron
Molecule
Ionic bonding
Sigma bond
Pi bond
Metallic bonding
Agostic interaction
Bent bond
Three-center two-electron bond
Three-center four-electron bond
Valence (chemistry)
Valence bond theory
Hydrogen
Electronegativity
Delocalized electron
File:Covalent.svg
Methane
Lewis structure
Irving Langmuir
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Gilbert N. Lewis
Photon
Lewis Structure
Double bond
Triple bond
Octet rule
Quantum mechanics
Walter Heitler
Fritz London
Molecular hydrogen
Atomic orbitals
Atomic orbitals
Sigma bond
Single bond
Pi bond
Double bond
Triple bond
Electronegativity
Chemical polarity
Geometry
Asymmetry
Dipole
Molecular structures
Macromolecular
HCl
Sulfur dioxide
Carbon dioxide
Methane
Ethanol
Iodine
Polyethylene
Nylon
Protein
Starch
Network covalent bonding
Graphite
Diamond
Quartz
Resistivity
Electronegativity
File:Graphical comparison of bonds.svg
Lewis structure
MO diagram
Radical (chemistry)
Dihydrogen cation
Dilithium
Orbital hybridisation
Helium dimer
Nitric oxide
Paramagnetism
Chlorine dioxide
Bromine dioxide
Iodine oxide
File:Nitric oxide.svg
File:Triplett-Sauerstoff.svg
Resonance (chemistry)
Lewis structure
Bond order
Nitrate
Nitrogen
File:Nitrate-ion-resonance-2D.png
Aromaticity
Organic chemistry
Hückel's rule
Pi bond
Benzene
Molecular orbital theory
Valence bond theory
Hexagon
Heterocyclic
Benzene
Hypervalent molecule
Xenon difluoride
Sulfur hexafluoride
Octet rule
Three-center four-electron bond
HOMO/LUMO
Molecular orbital theory
Resonance (chemistry)
Valence bond theory
Electron deficiency
Three-center two-electron bond
Boron hydrides
Diborane
Boron
Cluster chemistry
Four-center two-electron bond
Valence bond theory
Molecular orbital theory
Electron configuration
Orbital hybridisation
Resonance (chemistry)
Linear combination of atomic orbitals
Molecular orbital
Bond energy
Reaction mechanism
Ionization energy
Absorption spectroscopy
Hückel's rule
Configuration interaction
Electron correlation
Quantum chemistry
Center of mass
Quantum number
Covalent bond
Covalent bond
Covalent bond
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Kovalente binding
رابطة تساهمية
Enlace covalent
Enllaz covalente
Kovalent əlaqə
সমযোজী বন্ধন
Kiōng-iú kiat-ha̍p
Кавалентная сувязь
Ковалентна връзка
Kovalentna veza
Enllaç covalent
Ковалентла çыхăну
Kovalentní vazba
Bhondi yeGombedzanwa
Bond cofalent
Kovalent binding
Kovaleanta čanus
Kovalente Bindung
Kovalentne side
Ομοιοπολικός δεσμός
Enlace covalente
Kovalenta ligo
Lotura kobalente
پیوند کووالانسی
Liaison covalente
Nasc comhfhiúsach
Kiangley cofioosagh
Enlace covalente
공유 결합
Կովալենտ կապ
सहसंयोजी आबंध
Kovalentna veza
Ikatan kovalen
Legame covalente
קשר קוולנטי
Ikatan Kovalen
კოვალენტური ბმა
Коваленттік байланыс
Lyezon kovalan
Kovalentā saite
Kovalentinis ryšys
Kovalens kötés
Ковалентна врска
സഹസംയോജകബന്ധനം
सहसंयुज बंध
კოვალენტური ბუნაფა
Ikatan kovalen
ꯀꯣꯚꯦꯂꯦꯟꯠ ꯂꯤꯄꯨꯟ
Gê̤ṳng-gá-giông
Ковалент холбоо
ဖက်စပ်စည်း
Covalente binding
共有結合
Kovalent binding
Kovalent binding
Ligam covalent
Kovalent va ion bogʻlanish
ਸਹਿਯੋਜਕੀ ਜੋੜ
کوویلنٹ جوڑ
សម្ព័ន្ធកូវ៉ាឡង់
Wiązanie kowalencyjne
Ligação covalente
Legătură covalentă
Ковалентна вязба
Ковалентная связь
Коваленнаах ситим
شریک گرفتہ بند
Covalent bond
Lidhja kovalente
සහසංයුජ බන්ධනය
Covalent bond
Kovalentná väzba
Kovalentna vez
بەندی کوالانسی
Ковалентна веза
Kovalentna veza
Beungkeut kovalén
Kovalenttinen sidos
Kovalent bindning
சகப் பிணைப்பு
Turza tattekkant
Ковалент бәйләнеш
พันธะโคเวเลนต์
Kovalent bağ
Ковалентний зв'язок
کوویلنٹ بونڈ
Liên kết cộng hóa trị
共價鍵
共价键
קאוואלענטער בונד
Ìsopọ̀ àjọfagbáradìmú
共價鍵
共价键
Special:EntityPage/Q127920#sitelinks-wikipedia
Covalent bond
Talk:Covalent bond
Covalent bond
Covalent bond
Special:WhatLinksHere/Covalent bond
Special:RecentChangesLinked/Covalent bond
Wikipedia:File Upload Wizard
Special:SpecialPages
Special:EntityPage/Q127920
Category:Covalent bond
General Chemistry/Covalent bonds
Covalent bond
Covalent bond
Covalent bond
Main Page
Wikipedia:Contents
Portal:Current events
Special:Random
Wikipedia:About
Wikipedia:Contact us
Special:FundraiserRedirector?utm source=donate&utm medium=sidebar&utm campaign=C13 en.wikipedia.org&uselang=en
Help:Contents
Help:Introduction
Wikipedia:Community portal
Special:RecentChanges
Wikipedia:File upload wizard
Main Page
Special:Search
Help:Introduction
Special:MyContributions
Special:MyTalk
Kovalente binding
رابطة تساهمية
Enlace covalent
Enllaz covalente
Kovalent əlaqə
সমযোজী বন্ধন
Kiōng-iú kiat-ha̍p
Кавалентная сувязь
Ковалентна връзка
Kovalentna veza
Enllaç covalent
Ковалентла çыхăну
Kovalentní vazba
Bhondi yeGombedzanwa
Bond cofalent
Kovalent binding
Kovaleanta čanus
Kovalente Bindung
Kovalentne side
Ομοιοπολικός δεσμός
Enlace covalente
Kovalenta ligo
Lotura kobalente
پیوند کووالانسی
Liaison covalente
Nasc comhfhiúsach
Kiangley cofioosagh
Enlace covalente
공유 결합
Կովալենտ կապ
सहसंयोजी आबंध
Kovalentna veza
Ikatan kovalen
Legame covalente
קשר קוולנטי
Ikatan Kovalen
კოვალენტური ბმა
Коваленттік байланыс
Lyezon kovalan
Kovalentā saite
Kovalentinis ryšys
Kovalens kötés
Updating...x




Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.