Understanding Bond Energies: X-Y Bond Energy Contribution

AI Thread Summary
In the discussion, the focus is on understanding why a bond between a small atom X with low electronegativity and a large atom Y with high electronegativity results in a significant ionic contribution to bond energy. The reasoning is based on the concept of ionic character, which is influenced by the difference in electronegativity between the two atoms. A larger difference in electronegativity typically indicates a stronger ionic character in the bond, leading to higher bond energy. The size of the atoms also plays a role; smaller atoms tend to have higher electronegativity, while larger atoms have lower electronegativity, which affects the overall ionic nature of the bond.
guiromero
Messages
18
Reaction score
0
Hello.

Could someone please help me with this question about bond energy from an MIT course:

"For two bonded atoms X and Y, a small X and large Y will result in a bond energy (E A-B) with a large __________ contribution."

Thanks a lot if someone can help.
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
I've already gotten the answer, it's "ionic".
 
Why is it ionic?
 
I got this answer from another forum and the person said that these types of bonds have a high ionic character, which is the percentage of difference between the electronegativity of two covalently bonded atoms.
 
Why would you expect the electronegativity of the respective atoms to depend upon the size of those atoms?
 
Sorry, I forgot to correct the statement. The correct is like that:

"For two bonded atoms X and Y, a small eX and large eY will result in a bond energy (E A-B) with a large __________ contribution."

Where e = electronegativity
 
Thread 'How to make Sodium Chlorate by Electrolysis of salt water?'
I have a power supply for electrolysis of salt water brine, variable 3v to 6v up to 30 amps. Cathode is stainless steel, anode is carbon rods. Carbon rod surface area 42" sq. the Stainless steel cathode should be 21" sq. Salt is pure 100% salt dissolved into distilled water. I have been making saturated salt wrong. Today I learn saturated salt is, dissolve pure salt into 150°f water cool to 100°f pour into the 2 gallon brine tank. I find conflicting information about brine tank...
Engineers slash iridium use in electrolyzer catalyst by 80%, boosting path to affordable green hydrogen https://news.rice.edu/news/2025/engineers-slash-iridium-use-electrolyzer-catalyst-80-boosting-path-affordable-green Ruthenium is also fairly expensive (a year ago it was about $490/ troy oz, but has nearly doubled in price over the past year, now about $910/ troy oz). I tracks prices of Pt, Pd, Ru, Ir and Ru. Of the 5 metals, rhodium (Rh) is the most expensive. A year ago, Rh and Ir...
Back
Top