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Atomic Hook-Ups - Types of Chemical Bonds: Crash Course Chemistry #22 - YouTube
Channel: CrashCourse
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Humans, like chemicals, are really all about
bonds.
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Think about all the relationships in your
life.
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You're a casual acquaintance to some people,
a colleague or friend to others,
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and maybe more to that someone special.
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Maybe you're dating someone casually, or you're
in a committed relationship, or you're married.
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There are all kinds of different combinations
of people out there.
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And sometimes, you know, people fall for a
vampire or a werewolf. Who am I to judge?
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Fact is, each type of relationship requires
different things from you and the other person,
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but if you play your cards right, these relationships
allow you to relax
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and escape the stresses that come with the
constant search for affection.
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Distance is important in relationships too,
of course;
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too much distance makes it hard to stay focused on each other and requires a lot of effort to keep things together,
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and I may not have to tell you, too little
distance can be a problem as well.
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Everyone needs their space, and when you don't
have any,
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you just end up pushing away from whatever's
crowding you.
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In this way, atoms are a lot like us.
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We call their relationships bonds, just like
we do with our own relationships.
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And there are many different types.
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Each kind of atomic relationship requires
a different type of energy,
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but they all do best when they settle into
the lowest-stress situation possible.
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The nature of the bond between atoms is related
to the distance between them, and, like people
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(and vampires and werewolves, I suppose),
it also depends on how positive or negative they are.
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The difference is that, unlike human relationships,
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we can analyze exactly what makes different
kinds of chemical relationships work.
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And that's what this episode is all about.
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But, people, please remember that we here at Crash Course do not dispense relationship advice.
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[Theme Music]
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First things first, why do atoms do this at
all?
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Well, like everything else in the universe, atoms do whatever they can to reduce their overall energy,
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and they reach their lowest energy by achieving a balance between attractive and repulsive forces,
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being neither too clingy nor too aloof.
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So when two atoms approach each other, the electrons of each are attracted to the protons of the other.
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This is the electrostatic force.
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Like charges repel, opposites attract, like
in real life, or at least Paula Abdul songs.
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I know, I'm old.
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So when one atom is attracted to another,
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just like Edward Cullen and Bella in chemistry
class, to use a slightly more timely reference,
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it gets stressed out by the attractive force and tries to relieve the stress by getting closer.
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We've all been there, right? That hot, nerdy
vampire girl in your chemistry class?
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It's just, it's intense.
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The pull is so strong that the stress level or energy rises when the two are separated, so they stay close.
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But sometimes, they can get a little too close.
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When that happens, the nuclei repel each other
because of their like charges,
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and the energy between them rapidly increases
and they both back off,
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just enough to find that perfect little distance
between them, and everyone relaxes.
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This ideal, wonderful distance is the bond
length.
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It's the distance between two nuclei at the
point of minimum energy.
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In other words, where the attractive and repulsive
forces cancel each other out.
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The distance at which these two atoms of chlorine
reach their minimum energy,
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caught between the attraction of the electrons,
the nucleus,
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and the protons repelling the nuclei, is the
bond length.
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That energy minimum, which we know absolutely
is –239 kilojoules per mole (kJ/mol),
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occurs when the distance between the atoms
is 0.00199 nanometers (nm).
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That distance is the bond length of Cl2, chlorine
gas.
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Now because the electrons are attracted to
both nuclei in the molecule,
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they actually spend the majority of their
time in the space between them.
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This is often described as sharing electrons,
and we call this kind of bond a covalent bond.
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But not all sharing is equal.
I should know: I have an older brother.
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The strength with which an atom holds shared
electrons is called its electronegativity.
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The electronegativities of various elements are all super well known and waiting for you in tables on the Internet.
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If two atoms in a bond have very different
electronegativities, like, say,
hydrogen at 2.1 and oxygen at 3.5,
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the electrons are more attracted to the atom
with the higher electronegativity.
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The difference is so great that the electrons spend most of their time around the stronger atom
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and much less time around the other one.
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Like how all the neighborhood kids wanted
to hang out with John, my older brother,
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because he was more charismatic.
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When the electrons hang out closer to one
side of the bond,
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it creates a slight negative charge in that area and a slight positive charge around the other atom.
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This separation of charges is called polarity, and it's the polarity of the molecule that these atoms form, H2O,
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that makes water the most important molecule
on Earth.
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Covalent bonds like this, where electrons
are attracted to one atom more than the other,
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causing a separation of charges, are called
polar covalent bonds.
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But when a covalent bond forms between two
identical atoms,
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like the two chlorine atoms in our graph earlier,
the electrons are distributed evenly.
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We call this a non-polar covalent bond.
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But you've also gotta consider the middle
option, where atoms aren't identical,
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but have very similar electronegativities, like hydrogen, with an electronegativity of 2.1, and sulfur, at 2.5.
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The difference here is so tiny that the electrons
are pretty much still evenly distributed,
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and we call that a non-polar covalent bond
as well.
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There's a huge world of important chemicals
that have these kinds of bonds.
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So many, in fact, that we will dedicate a
couple of separate episodes to them.
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Covalent bonds tend to form from non-metals
and sometimes metalloids,
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those elements that have both metallic and
non-metallic characteristics.
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That's because most of them hold their electrons
so tightly
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that they're more likely to share them with
another atom than to gain or lose them altogether.
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Metals, on the other hand, have loosely-held
outer electron shells,
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so they're constantly dropping electrons and
becoming positive ions.
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And when positive ions come across negative ions, like those formed from halogens, for instance,
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you have to know what's gonna happen.
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They are attracted to each other, which means
energy is required to keep them apart,
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which means that they're gonna bond if they can, creating that oh-so-wonderful point of minimum energy.
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This type of bond is unsurprisingly called an ionic bond, a bond formed between a positive ion and a negative ion.
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Because the ions are formed when one atom
loses electrons and the other gains them,
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we often say that an ionic bond is formed by the transfer of electrons from one atom to another.
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And we can calculate the amount of energy
that exists in a bond between ions at a given
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distance using a formula called Coulomb's
law.
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Note that this only works for ionic bonds because the calculation requires the charges of the ions,
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which covalent bonds don't have.
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Coulomb's law says that the energy been two
ions equals the product of the two charges,
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which are represented by capital Qs, because
why not,
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divided by the distance, or radius, between
the two nuclei,
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all multiplied by a constant, 2.31 × 10–19
joules per nanometer (J•nm).
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Of course, the radius also has to be expressed in nanometers — you gotta make the units match.
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Let's see how it works with something simple:
sodium chloride, or table salt.
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We know that the normal charge on a sodium ion is +1 and the normal charge on chloride is -1.
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These are Q1 and Q2.
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The length of a stable NaCl bond is 0.276
nm, so we put that in for the radius,
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and finally a quick calculation tells us that
the bond contains –8.37 × 10–19 J of energy.
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Remember, that negative number represents a decrease in the energy of the system due to an attractive force,
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which certainly makes sense here.
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Sodium and chloride ions are strongly attracted
to each other due to their opposite charges.
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Of course, you may have noticed that –8.37
× 10–19 J looks like a tiny, tiny number,
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but keep in mind we're talking about one single
pair of ions.
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The –239 kJ that we got for chlorine? That
was for a whole mole of molecules.
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When multiplied by the 10^17 or so ions in
a single grain of table salt
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and then by the thousands of grains of salt
in a mole, the energy becomes much more significant.
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The NaCl bond is, in fact, quite strong.
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And because they are formed by a positive
ion and a negative ion,
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two charges completely separated between two
different particles,
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ionic bonds are extremely polar, way more
polar than polar covalent bonds.
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And so those are our three types of bonds:
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non-polar covalent, formed by the equal or
nearly equal sharing of two electrons between
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non-metal or metalloid atoms;
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polar covalent, formed by the uneven sharing
of electrons between two non-metals or metalloids;
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and ionic, formed by the transfer of electrons
from a metal to a non-metal.
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It's important to remember, though, that there aren't only three designations for chemical bonds.
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Just like human relationships, bonds don't
always have really well-defined boundaries.
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Everything is a continuum. Labels are useful,
but they can only take us so far.
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There are, however, certain properties that each kind of bond tends to have that you should know.
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For instance, ionic compounds are often crystalline
in their solid form because of the way the
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ions pack together, like salt is.
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They're generally soluble in water because
the two ions interact separately with the
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positively and negatively charged areas on
a water molecule.
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And once they're separated or dissolved, the
ions allow the solution to conduct electricity.
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Covalent compounds, on the other hand, tend to be softer solids, liquids, or gases like Cl2 is at room temperature.
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They're often not soluble in water, and even when they are, the solutions don't conduct electricity.
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The differences in these properties stem mostly
from the differences in their polarities.
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So yeah, polarity is crazy important. So important that we'll be doing a whole episode on it soon.
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Until then, I want to thank you for the bond
that you have to Crash Course Chemistry,
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whether it's casual observer, faithful viewer,
or committed subscriber.
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Today, if you were paying attention,
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you learned that chemical bonds form in order to minimize the energy between two atoms or ions.
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You've also learned that the chemical bonds
may be covalent if the atoms share electrons,
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and that covalent bonds can share those electrons
evenly or unevenly.
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Bonds can also be ionic if the electrons are
transferred,
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and you learned how to calculate the energy transferred in an ionic bond using Coulomb's law.
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This episode of Crash Course Chemistry was written by Edi González and edited by Blake de Pastino and myself.
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Our chemistry consultant is Dr. Heiko Langner.
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It was filmed, edited, and directed by Nicholas
Jenkins. Our script supervisor is Michael Aranda.
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He is also our sound designer, and our graphics
team, as always, is Thought Café.
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