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GCSE/Combined Science/AQA

C2.1Chemical bonds: ionic, covalent and metallic bonding

Notes

Chemical Bonds (C2.1)

Why do atoms bond?

Atoms bond to achieve a full outer electron shell (stable configuration like a noble gas). They do this by transferring or sharing electrons.

Ionic bonding

Ionic bonds form between a metal and a non-metal. The metal atom loses one or more electrons (becomes a positive cation); the non-metal atom gains electrons (becomes a negative anion). Opposite charges attract — electrostatic attraction holds the ions together.

Example: NaCl (sodium chloride)

  • Na (2,8,1) loses 1 electron → Na⁺ (2,8) — full outer shell
  • Cl (2,8,7) gains 1 electron → Cl⁻ (2,8,8) — full outer shell

Example: MgO (magnesium oxide)

  • Mg loses 2 electrons → Mg²⁺
  • O gains 2 electrons → O²⁻

Ionic compounds form a giant ionic lattice — millions of ions arranged in a regular 3D pattern. The strong electrostatic forces between all ions explain high melting points.

Covalent bonding

Covalent bonds form between non-metals. Atoms share pairs of electrons. Each shared pair is one covalent bond.

Examples:

  • H₂O: oxygen shares 2 electrons (one with each H)
  • CO₂: carbon shares 4 electrons with oxygen (two double bonds)
  • N₂: nitrogen shares 3 electrons with each other (triple bond, N≡N)
  • CH₄ (methane): carbon shares one electron with each of four H atoms

Metallic bonding

In metals, atoms lose their outer electrons into a delocalised sea of electrons shared across all atoms. The positive metal ions are held together by attraction to the delocalised electrons.

This explains:

  • High melting points — strong attraction between ions and sea of electrons
  • Electrical conductivity — delocalised electrons can flow
  • Thermal conductivity — electrons transfer energy
  • Malleability — layers of ions can slide without breaking bonds (sea of electrons reforms)

Summary comparison

FeatureIonicCovalent (simple)Metallic
BetweenMetal + non-metalNon-metalsMetals
Transfer or share?TransferShareDelocalised (share)
Conducts electricity?When molten/dissolvedNoYes
Melting pointHighLow (simple molecules)High

Common exam errors

  1. Saying ionic compounds conduct when solid — they don't (ions fixed in lattice); only when molten or in solution.
  2. Drawing dot-and-cross diagrams with ions sharing electrons — ionic bonds involve transfer, NOT sharing.
  3. Forgetting that metallic bonding involves delocalised electrons, not shared pairs.

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Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Ionic bond formation — NaCl

    (a) Describe how an ionic bond forms between sodium and chlorine. Include electron transfer. [3]
    (b) What type of structure do sodium chloride ions form? [1]

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  2. Question 25 marks

    Covalent bonding

    (a) What is a covalent bond? [1]
    (b) Draw a dot-and-cross diagram for a molecule of water (H₂O). Show outer electrons only. [2]
    (c) Explain why simple covalent molecules (like H₂O) have low melting points. [2]

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  3. Question 34 marks

    Metallic bonding

    Explain why metals are good conductors of electricity and are malleable, using metallic bonding theory. [4]

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  4. Question 44 marks

    Ionic vs covalent — conductivity

    (a) Sodium chloride does not conduct electricity in the solid state but does when dissolved in water. Explain why. [3]
    (b) A covalent compound such as sugar does not conduct electricity when dissolved in water. Explain why. [1]

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  5. Question 54 marks

    Dot-and-cross diagram for O₂

    (a) Draw a dot-and-cross diagram for an oxygen molecule (O₂). Show outer electrons only. [2]
    (b) State the bond type and number of bonding pairs. [2]

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Flashcards

C2.1 — Chemical bonds: ionic, covalent and metallic bonding

9-card SR deck for AQA Combined Science topic C2.1

9 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)