The required syllabus content for Unit 7, in order. Each card is one lesson-sized checkpoint.
The electrostatic attraction between two oppositely charged ions
Compare and contrast ionic, metallic, and covalent bonding.
Metallic bonding can be defined as electrostatic attractions between a bed of metal cations and delocalized electrons.
What role do bonding and structure have in the design of materials?
Lesson 6 of Unit 7.
Lesson 7 of Unit 7.
Lesson 8+9 of Unit 7.
Lesson 10 of Unit 7.
Chromatography is a technique to separate and identify components in a mixture
Lesson 12 of Unit 7.
Each lesson card below mirrors the original teacher deck — syllabus refs, content, worked examples and practice questions in order.
An ionic bond forms when electrons are transferred from a metal to a non-metal, creating a cation and an anion held together by electrostatic attraction.
Charges must balance: Na⁺ + Cl⁻ → NaCl. Mg²⁺ + 2 Cl⁻ → MgCl₂. Al³⁺ + 3 O²⁻... cross-multiply: Al₂O₃.
A covalent bond forms when two non-metal atoms share electrons to gain stable noble-gas-like configurations.
Single bond: 1 shared pair (e.g. H–H). Double: 2 (O=O). Triple: 3 (N≡N). Higher bond order → shorter, stronger bonds. C–C 154 pm; C=C 134 pm; C≡C 120 pm.
Both shared electrons come from the same atom. The donor has a lone pair; the acceptor has an empty orbital. Examples: NH₄⁺, H₃O⁺, CO.
Metallic bonding: a regular array of metal cations sits in a "sea" of delocalised electrons. Electrons came from the outer shells; now belong to the whole lattice.
Bond strength scales with charge: Na (+1) is soft and low-melting; Fe (+2/+3) is hard; W (+6) has m.p. 3422 °C.
Real bonds aren't always purely one type. The van Arkel-Ketelaar triangle (see diagram below in section 7.2) plots compounds by average electronegativity vs ΔEN, mapping the three bonding extremes (ionic, covalent, metallic) as vertices. Most real compounds lie inside.
A molecule can have polar bonds but be non-polar overall — if the dipoles cancel by symmetry. CO₂ (linear, two C=O dipoles cancel) vs H₂O (bent, dipoles add).
VSEPR (Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion) theory: electron pairs around a central atom arrange themselves to minimise repulsion.
Lone pairs repel more strongly than bonding pairs (their cloud is held by one nucleus rather than two), squeezing bonding angles smaller than the idealised geometry would predict — that's why H₂O's 104.5° is less than 109.5°.
See the interactive 3D molecule viewers below — drag and zoom each shape.
Use the interactive 3D models in the diagrams section below to verify VSEPR predictions. Drag to rotate; zoom in and out to confirm bond angles.
Tasks: identify the shape, count lone pairs, predict polarity, and confirm against the viewer.
See the diagrams below for visual representations of each force, including the O–H...O linear geometry of the hydrogen bond.
Caffeine is a non-polar molecule, weakly soluble in water but readily soluble in non-polar organic solvents like dichloromethane (DCM).
Confirm purity by m.p. — pure caffeine: 235–237 °C.
TLC uses a thin layer of silica gel or alumina bonded to a glass/plastic plate (stationary phase). Drops of sample are spotted near the bottom; the plate is placed in a covered tank with mobile-phase solvent.
Capillary action carries the solvent up. Components migrate at different rates based on their affinity for the two phases.
Rf = distance moved by spot / distance moved by solvent front
Rf is between 0 and 1. Characteristic for a given compound in a given solvent system.
A giant covalent structure (network solid) has covalent bonds extending throughout the whole crystal — billions of atoms, one giant molecule.
Interactive 3D models of diamond and graphite are in the diagrams section below.
Atoms bond to reach a more stable arrangement (typically a full outer shell — the octet rule). Three strategies: transfer, share, or pool electrons.
Metal donates 1+ electrons to a non-metal. Resulting cations and anions are held in a regular lattice by electrostatic attraction. Strong but brittle; high melting points; conduct only when molten or aqueous.
Two non-metals share one or more pairs of electrons. Discrete molecules with strong intramolecular bonds but variable intermolecular forces.
Metal atoms release their outer electrons into a delocalised sea. The lattice of cations sits in this sea. Conductive, malleable, ductile, lustrous.
There's no sharp line — bond type is a continuum. The electronegativity difference (ΔEN) between two atoms tells you where on it the bond lies.
Essentially non-polar covalent. C–C, C–H. Electrons shared roughly equally.
Polar covalent. The more electronegative atom gets δ⁻. C–O, O–H, H–Cl.
Predominantly ionic. NaCl (ΔEN ≈ 2.1). Electrons effectively transferred.
A molecule can contain polar bonds but be non-polar overall — if the dipoles cancel. CO₂ (linear, polar bonds cancel) vs H₂O (bent, dipoles add).
There are three pure bond types — ionic, covalent, metallic — but most real bonds lie somewhere between. Plot a compound by the average of the two atoms' electronegativities (x-axis) and the difference between them (y-axis), and the position reveals the bond character.
Average electronegativity. Low (left): metals, electrons easily lost / pooled. High (right): non-metals, electrons held tightly / shared.
Difference between the two atoms. Small Δχ = symmetric sharing (or pooling). Large Δχ = electrons effectively transferred from low-χ to high-χ → ionic.
The triangle has no sharp lines — there is no "ionic / not ionic" cutoff in nature. NaCl is mostly ionic but a bit covalent; HCl is mostly covalent but quite polar. Position on the triangle quantifies the blend.
A Lewis structure shows every valence electron. Bonded pairs are drawn as lines (or pairs of dots between atoms); lone pairs are drawn on individual atoms.
1) Count total valence electrons (add/subtract for charge).
2) Place the least electronegative atom in the centre (usually) — H is never central.
3) Draw single bonds between central and outer atoms.
4) Distribute the remaining electrons as lone pairs around outer atoms first (to give octets), then to the central atom.
5) If the central atom doesn't have an octet, form double or triple bonds by moving lone pairs onto bonds.
Electron domains (bonding pairs, lone pairs, and multiple bonds counted as one domain each) arrange themselves around a central atom to maximise the angle between them.
| Domains | Lone pairs | Shape | Angle | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 0 | Linear | 180° | CO₂, BeCl₂ |
| 3 | 0 | Trigonal planar | 120° | BF₃, CH₂O |
| 3 | 1 | Bent | ~118° | SO₂, O₃ |
| 4 | 0 | Tetrahedral | 109.5° | CH₄, NH₄⁺ |
| 4 | 1 | Trigonal pyramidal | ~107° | NH₃, H₃O⁺ |
| 4 | 2 | Bent | ~104.5° | H₂O |
| 5 | 0 | Trigonal bipyramidal | 90° / 120° | PCl₅, PF₅ |
| 6 | 0 | Octahedral | 90° | SF₆, [Fe(H₂O)₆]³⁺ |
Lone pairs repel slightly more strongly than bonding pairs (their electron cloud is held by only one nucleus, not two). This squeezes bonding-pair angles smaller than the "ideal" geometry would predict — that's why H₂O's 104.5° is less than the tetrahedral 109.5°.
Drag to rotate · scroll to zoom · the geometry is the chemistry
Linear · CO₂
180° · 2 domains · 0 lone pairs
Trigonal planar · BF₃
120° · 3 domains · 0 lone pairs
Tetrahedral · CH₄
109.5° · 4 domains · 0 lone pairs
Trigonal pyramidal · NH₃
~107° · 4 domains · 1 lone pair (pink)
Bent · H₂O
104.5° · 4 domains · 2 lone pairs (pink)
Bent · SO₂
~118° · 3 domains · 1 lone pair (pink)
Trigonal bipyramidal · PCl₅
90° / 120° · 5 domains · 0 lone pairs
Octahedral · SF₆
90° · 6 domains · 0 lone pairs
Solid wedge (filled triangle) = bond pointing out of the page toward you. Dashed line = bond pointing into the page away from you. Solid line = bond lying in the plane of the page. This convention lets a 2-D drawing show real 3-D geometry. In trigonal bipyramidal PCl₅, the two axial atoms (top, bottom) are at 90° to the three equatorial atoms (which are at 120° to each other). In octahedral SF₆, every adjacent bond is at 90°.
Three flavours, strongest to weakest. The dominant one determines boiling point, solubility, and most physical properties.
Universal — happens between any two molecules. Strength rises with molecular size and surface area. Why I₂ is solid at room T but F₂ is gas.
Between polar molecules. δ⁺ end of one attracts δ⁻ end of next. Stronger than London for molecules of similar size.
A strong dipole-dipole specifically between H bonded to F, O or N and a lone pair on F, O or N. Up to ~10% the strength of a covalent bond. Responsible for water's anomalously high boiling point.
Compare boiling points of group 16 hydrides: H₂S (−60 °C), H₂Se (−42 °C), H₂Te (−2 °C). Extrapolating, H₂O should boil around −90 °C. It boils at +100 °C. That extra 190 K is hydrogen bonding.
~1–10 kJ mol⁻¹. Universal — between any molecules. Strength rises with size and surface area. Why I₂ is a solid at room T but F₂ is a gas.
~5–25 kJ mol⁻¹. Between polar molecules. The δ⁺ of one molecule attracts the δ⁻ of another. Adds to the London dispersion that's always there too.
~10–40 kJ mol⁻¹. A special, very strong dipole-dipole. Requires H on N/O/F (highly polar bond) interacting with a lone pair on N/O/F. Responsible for water's high b.p., DNA pairing, protein folding.
Some non-metals form covalent bonds that extend throughout the whole crystal — billions of atoms, one network.
Each carbon bonded covalently to four neighbours in a tetrahedral arrangement. The whole crystal is one giant molecule. Extremely hard (each bond must break to deform). Doesn't conduct (all electrons localised).
Each carbon bonded to three neighbours in flat hexagonal sheets. The fourth electron is delocalised between layers. Layers slip past each other (lubricant; pencil "lead") and conduct along the plane.
Each Si bonded to 4 O; each O bridges 2 Si. Quartz, sand, glass. Hard, high-melting (~1700 °C), insulating.
A single hexagonal sheet of carbon. Strongest known material per weight. Electrically conductive. Industrially important.
Drag to rotate · scroll to zoom · the structure is the property
Diamond
sp³ · tetrahedral · 109.5° · 1.54 Å C–C · 3-D network
Graphite
sp² · trigonal planar · 120° · 1.42 Å in-plane · 3.35 Å between layers
Diamond — every C uses all 4 valence electrons in σ bonds to 4 neighbours. No free electrons. Every direction in the crystal is locked by strong σ bonds → hard, insulating, very high melting (~3550 °C).
Graphite — every C uses 3 valence electrons in σ bonds to 3 in-plane neighbours; the 4th sits in a π orbital delocalised across the layer. Strong bonds within a layer (hard to break) but only weak London forces between layers (easy to slip → lubricant; layers flake off onto paper → pencil "lead"). Delocalised π electrons conduct along the plane.
If you can't define one of these in a sentence, that's where to revise next. Click any term for its definition.