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Author: Subject: Polar Bond Confusion!
Backyard Chemist
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[*] posted on 14-1-2015 at 17:23
Polar Bond Confusion!


Can the following compounds have a polar covalent bond?

1. AgCl

2. FeS

The electronegativities of these compounds are between 0.1 and 1.7, so therefore there would be a polar covalent bond? If so, how? If not, how?
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Brain&Force
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[*] posted on 14-1-2015 at 17:30


"Ionic" and "covalent" are a spectrum, there are no purely ionic bonds. You can only get purely covalent bonds between atoms with the same electronegativity.

The bonds in this case have both ionic and covalent characteristics.




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diddi
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[*] posted on 14-1-2015 at 18:47


In the case of FeS, the compound displays typical transition metal to sulphide bonding which is highly covalent. very few of the transition metal sulphides are soluble I water Many metal sulfides are often found in nature in that form (eg galena, pyrite, orpiment etc) demonstrating their stability and lack of ionic bonding present. A number of the sulphides also form covalent lattice structures.

and from : https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100831204053A...


I have looked at this problem in detail before, and the result is quite surprising. I thought that a major contribution to the insolubility of AgCl was that the solvation energy was much smaller than something like K^+ because Ag^+ is soft and water is hard, so the attraction of H2O for Ag^+ is less than to the harder K^+. But this is not the case: the hydration energy of Ag^+ is as I recall comparable or slightly greater than the hydration energies of the Group 1 metal cations.
It turns out that when you do the theoretical calculation of the lattice energies of the Group 1 halides (e.g., KCl) using the Born-Lande equation the agreement with experimental (Born-Haber cycle) is remarkably good. However when you do the same procedure for AgCl (and AgBr, AgI) the experimental lattice energy is as I recall some 150 kJ mol-1 higher than that calculated by the B-L eqn. In other words AgCl has an added energy component that of course is attributed to partial covalent character. Besides the Coulombic attraction of Ag^+ ion for the Cl^- ion there is also some sharing of electrons that further strengthens the lattice. A larger lattice energy means more energy to break up the lattice in the solvation process. There is a delicate balance between U the lattice energy, and the ΔH(hyd) for M^+ and X^- for Group 1 halides; the ΔS term in ΔG also plays a major role. For AgCl the larger U(AgCl) dominates and the stuff is completely insoluble. So AgCl is mainly ionic but with significant covalent character.

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[*] posted on 14-1-2015 at 19:35




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