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19. using your electronegativity chart, calculate the electronegativity…

Question

  1. using your electronegativity chart, calculate the electronegativity difference for the following bonds. identify them as nonpolar covalent, polar covalent, or ionic.
bondδenbond type
c-s
k-i
se-f
mg-cl
s-br

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we use electronegativity values (from a standard chart: H=2.1, Cl=3.0, C=2.5, S=2.5, K=0.8, I=2.5, Se=2.4, F=4.0, Mg=1.2, Br=2.8, S=2.5). The formula for electronegativity difference is $\Delta \text{EN} = |\text{EN}_1 - \text{EN}_2|$. Bond types: $\Delta \text{EN} < 0.5$ (nonpolar covalent), $0.5 \leq \Delta \text{EN} < 2.0$ (polar covalent), $\Delta \text{EN} \geq 2.0$ (ionic).

H-Cl

Step1: Find EN values

EN(H)=2.1, EN(Cl)=3.0

Step2: Calculate $\Delta$EN

$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.1 - 3.0| = 0.9$

Step3: Determine bond type

$0.5 \leq 0.9 < 2.0$ → Polar Covalent

C-S

Step1: Find EN values

EN(C)=2.5, EN(S)=2.5

Step2: Calculate $\Delta$EN

$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.5 - 2.5| = 0$

Step3: Determine bond type

$\Delta \text{EN} < 0.5$ → Nonpolar Covalent

K-I

Step1: Find EN values

EN(K)=0.8, EN(I)=2.5

Step2: Calculate $\Delta$EN

$\Delta \text{EN} = |0.8 - 2.5| = 1.7$
Wait, correction: K is 0.8, I is 2.5? No, K is metal (0.8), I is 2.5. Wait, but Mg-Cl: Mg=1.2, Cl=3.0 (ΔEN=1.8). Wait, standard ionic is ΔEN ≥2.0. Let’s recheck:

Wait, K (0.8) and I (2.5): ΔEN=1.7 (polar covalent? No, K is metal, I is nonmetal. Wait, maybe my EN for K is wrong? Wait, K is 0.8, I is 2.5. Wait, no—K is 0.8, I is 2.5: ΔEN=1.7. But Mg-Cl: Mg=1.2, Cl=3.0 → ΔEN=1.8. Wait, maybe the threshold is 1.7 or 2.0. Let’s use 2.0 as ionic.

Wait, let's redo with correct EN (from Pauling scale):

  • H: 2.1, Cl: 3.0
  • C: 2.5, S: 2.5
  • K: 0.8, I: 2.5
  • Se: 2.4, F: 4.0
  • Mg: 1.2, Cl: 3.0
  • S: 2.5, Br: 2.8
K-I (corrected)

EN(K)=0.8, EN(I)=2.5
$\Delta \text{EN} = |0.8 - 2.5| = 1.7$ → Polar Covalent? Wait, no—K is a metal, I is nonmetal. Wait, maybe I made a mistake. Wait, K is 0.8, I is 2.5: ΔEN=1.7. But Mg-Cl: Mg=1.2, Cl=3.0 → ΔEN=1.8. Wait, maybe the ionic threshold is 1.7 or 2.0. Let’s check standard:

  • Nonpolar covalent: ΔEN < 0.5
  • Polar covalent: 0.5 ≤ ΔEN < 2.0
  • Ionic: ΔEN ≥ 2.0
Se-F

EN(Se)=2.4, EN(F)=4.0
$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.4 - 4.0| = 1.6$ → Polar Covalent

Mg-Cl

EN(Mg)=1.2, EN(Cl)=3.0
$\Delta \text{EN} = |1.2 - 3.0| = 1.8$ → Polar Covalent? Wait, no—Mg is metal, Cl is nonmetal. Wait, 1.8 is close to 2.0. Maybe the problem considers ≥1.7 as ionic? Let’s check:

If ΔEN ≥2.0: ionic. So Mg-Cl: 1.8 < 2.0 → Polar Covalent? No, that’s incorrect. Wait, Mg is 1.2, Cl is 3.0: ΔEN=1.8. But MgCl₂ is ionic. So maybe the threshold is 1.7. Let’s adjust:

  • Ionic: ΔEN ≥1.7
  • Polar covalent: 0.5 ≤ ΔEN <1.7
  • Nonpolar: <0.5
S-Br

EN(S)=2.5, EN(Br)=2.8
$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.5 - 2.8| = 0.3$ → Nonpolar Covalent

Now, let's tabulate:

Bond$\Delta$ENBond Type
C-S0Nonpolar Covalent
K-I1.7Ionic (if ≥1.7) or Polar Covalent (if ≥2.0). Wait, K=0.8, I=2.5: 1.7. If threshold 1.7, ionic.
Se-F1.6Polar Covalent
Mg-Cl1.8Ionic (if ≥1.7)
S-Br0.3Nonpolar Covalent

Wait, the confusion is the ionic threshold. Let’s use the standard (ΔEN ≥2.0 for ionic). Then:

  • H-Cl: 0.9 → Polar Covalent
  • C-S: 0 → Nonpolar Covalent
  • K-I: 1.7 → Polar Covalent (but KI is ionic? Wait, KI is an ionic compound. So maybe my EN for I is wrong. Wait, I is 2.5, K is 0.8: ΔEN=1.7. But KI is ionic. So perhaps the EN of I is lower? Wait, no—Pauling EN: I=2.5, K=0.8. Maybe the problem uses a different scale. Let’s proceed with the given steps.
Final Table (using ΔEN ≥2.0 for ionic):
Bond$\Delta$ENBond Type

| H-…

Answer:

To solve this, we use electronegativity values (from a standard chart: H=2.1, Cl=3.0, C=2.5, S=2.5, K=0.8, I=2.5, Se=2.4, F=4.0, Mg=1.2, Br=2.8, S=2.5). The formula for electronegativity difference is $\Delta \text{EN} = |\text{EN}_1 - \text{EN}_2|$. Bond types: $\Delta \text{EN} < 0.5$ (nonpolar covalent), $0.5 \leq \Delta \text{EN} < 2.0$ (polar covalent), $\Delta \text{EN} \geq 2.0$ (ionic).

H-Cl

Step1: Find EN values

EN(H)=2.1, EN(Cl)=3.0

Step2: Calculate $\Delta$EN

$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.1 - 3.0| = 0.9$

Step3: Determine bond type

$0.5 \leq 0.9 < 2.0$ → Polar Covalent

C-S

Step1: Find EN values

EN(C)=2.5, EN(S)=2.5

Step2: Calculate $\Delta$EN

$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.5 - 2.5| = 0$

Step3: Determine bond type

$\Delta \text{EN} < 0.5$ → Nonpolar Covalent

K-I

Step1: Find EN values

EN(K)=0.8, EN(I)=2.5

Step2: Calculate $\Delta$EN

$\Delta \text{EN} = |0.8 - 2.5| = 1.7$
Wait, correction: K is 0.8, I is 2.5? No, K is metal (0.8), I is 2.5. Wait, but Mg-Cl: Mg=1.2, Cl=3.0 (ΔEN=1.8). Wait, standard ionic is ΔEN ≥2.0. Let’s recheck:

Wait, K (0.8) and I (2.5): ΔEN=1.7 (polar covalent? No, K is metal, I is nonmetal. Wait, maybe my EN for K is wrong? Wait, K is 0.8, I is 2.5. Wait, no—K is 0.8, I is 2.5: ΔEN=1.7. But Mg-Cl: Mg=1.2, Cl=3.0 → ΔEN=1.8. Wait, maybe the threshold is 1.7 or 2.0. Let’s use 2.0 as ionic.

Wait, let's redo with correct EN (from Pauling scale):

  • H: 2.1, Cl: 3.0
  • C: 2.5, S: 2.5
  • K: 0.8, I: 2.5
  • Se: 2.4, F: 4.0
  • Mg: 1.2, Cl: 3.0
  • S: 2.5, Br: 2.8
K-I (corrected)

EN(K)=0.8, EN(I)=2.5
$\Delta \text{EN} = |0.8 - 2.5| = 1.7$ → Polar Covalent? Wait, no—K is a metal, I is nonmetal. Wait, maybe I made a mistake. Wait, K is 0.8, I is 2.5: ΔEN=1.7. But Mg-Cl: Mg=1.2, Cl=3.0 → ΔEN=1.8. Wait, maybe the ionic threshold is 1.7 or 2.0. Let’s check standard:

  • Nonpolar covalent: ΔEN < 0.5
  • Polar covalent: 0.5 ≤ ΔEN < 2.0
  • Ionic: ΔEN ≥ 2.0
Se-F

EN(Se)=2.4, EN(F)=4.0
$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.4 - 4.0| = 1.6$ → Polar Covalent

Mg-Cl

EN(Mg)=1.2, EN(Cl)=3.0
$\Delta \text{EN} = |1.2 - 3.0| = 1.8$ → Polar Covalent? Wait, no—Mg is metal, Cl is nonmetal. Wait, 1.8 is close to 2.0. Maybe the problem considers ≥1.7 as ionic? Let’s check:

If ΔEN ≥2.0: ionic. So Mg-Cl: 1.8 < 2.0 → Polar Covalent? No, that’s incorrect. Wait, Mg is 1.2, Cl is 3.0: ΔEN=1.8. But MgCl₂ is ionic. So maybe the threshold is 1.7. Let’s adjust:

  • Ionic: ΔEN ≥1.7
  • Polar covalent: 0.5 ≤ ΔEN <1.7
  • Nonpolar: <0.5
S-Br

EN(S)=2.5, EN(Br)=2.8
$\Delta \text{EN} = |2.5 - 2.8| = 0.3$ → Nonpolar Covalent

Now, let's tabulate:

Bond$\Delta$ENBond Type
C-S0Nonpolar Covalent
K-I1.7Ionic (if ≥1.7) or Polar Covalent (if ≥2.0). Wait, K=0.8, I=2.5: 1.7. If threshold 1.7, ionic.
Se-F1.6Polar Covalent
Mg-Cl1.8Ionic (if ≥1.7)
S-Br0.3Nonpolar Covalent

Wait, the confusion is the ionic threshold. Let’s use the standard (ΔEN ≥2.0 for ionic). Then:

  • H-Cl: 0.9 → Polar Covalent
  • C-S: 0 → Nonpolar Covalent
  • K-I: 1.7 → Polar Covalent (but KI is ionic? Wait, KI is an ionic compound. So maybe my EN for I is wrong. Wait, I is 2.5, K is 0.8: ΔEN=1.7. But KI is ionic. So perhaps the EN of I is lower? Wait, no—Pauling EN: I=2.5, K=0.8. Maybe the problem uses a different scale. Let’s proceed with the given steps.
Final Table (using ΔEN ≥2.0 for ionic):
Bond$\Delta$ENBond Type
C-S0Nonpolar Covalent
K-I1.7Polar Covalent
Se-F1.6Polar Covalent
Mg-Cl1.8Polar Covalent
S-Br0.3Nonpolar Covalent

(Note: If the threshold is 1.7 for ionic, adjust K-I and Mg-Cl to ionic. But based on standard Pauling, ionic is ΔEN ≥2.0.)