Sep
28

Covalent Bonds

Filed Under (year 11) by griggans on 28-09-2007



 

Yesterday, we looked at the bonding in hydrogen, which is covalent. Hydrogen has one electron. It likes to have two electrons so it shares an electron with another hydrogen atom, forming a hydrogen molecule H2. Oxygen(O2) has the same sharing of electrons in a slightly more complicated way, which we will look at next week, in addition to ionic bonds.

We also saw that atoms contain 3 particles – neutral neutrons and positive protons in the nucleus, and negative electrons in shells moving around the nucleus. Between the electron shells and the nucleus is empty space - in fact most of an atom is in fact empty space!

An animation of the covalent bonding in chlorine

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