IONIC AND COVALENT COMPOUNDS – TWO EXTREMES
Polarization in ionic compounds
A small, positively charged ion (a cation) in an ionic compound can attract the elec-
trons of a neighbouring negatively charged ion (an anion) towards it and distort the
anion. When this happens, the anion is said to be polarized. This distortion can be
better represented by using the electron density model of an ionic compound, rather
than using Lewis symbols. The outer electron density contours of a purely ionic
bond, and an ionic bond which is polarized, are shown in Fig. 4.7.
Notice that, in the polarized case, more electron density is concentrated between
the ions. A region of high electron density between atoms is characteristic of
covalent compounds, so that the polarized compound in Fig. 4.7(b), although still
mainly ionic, has some covalent character. When is significant polarization likely to
occur? We can answer this question by applying the following rules.
The polarization of an ionic bond (i.e. its covalent character) is high if:
1.The cation is (a) small and (b) carries a high positive charge.
2.The anion is (a) large and (b) carries a high negative charge.
Compounds in which both conditions apply will have a great deal of covalent
character. An example of a strongly polarizing cation is Al3+, which is small and car-
ries a large positive charge. The anion Iis large; the degree of polarization in AlI 3 is
so large, that it is considered to be a covalent compound. However, the compound
AlF 3 has far more ionic character, because Fis a much smaller anion and is not
polarized to the same degree as I.
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Fig. 4.7Polarization: (a)
purely ionic; (b) polarized.
Cation Radius/pm Anion Radius/pm
Li 160 F 136
Na 95 Cl 181
K 133 S^2 184
Mg^2 165
Al^3 153
(i) In the series of ionic chlorides: LiCl, NaCl
and KCl, which compound would have
the most covalent character?
(ii) From the selection of anions and cations
above, which compound would you
expect to be the most ionic?
(iii) Which compound would you expect to
have the most covalent character?
Exercise 4J
Ionic and covalent bonding: a summary
The overall picture is summed up in Fig. 4.8. Again, the outer contours of electron
density maps have been used instead of Lewis symbols.
Fig. 4.8An overview of bonding types.
Polarization
The sizes of some cations and anions are
listed below:
Polarized ionic
e.g.Cal 2
Polar covalent
e.g.Hl
Purely covalent
e.g.Cl 2
Clearly ionic
e.g.KF