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CHEMISTRY FORM 2


1. STRUCTURE OF THE ATOM, AND THE PERIODIC TABLE
2. CHEMICAL FAMILIES AND PATTERNS IN PROPERTIES
3. CHEMICAL BONDING AND STRUCTURE
4. SALTS
5. EFFECT OF AN ELECTRIC CURRENT ON SUBSTANCES
6. CARBON AND SOME OF ITS COMPOUNDS
Content developer

Chemical Bonding and Structure: Bond

3.0 Chemical Bonding and Structure


3.1 Bond


Bonding is a term commonly used even in families, workplace and other areas of life.


Questions 3.1

Analogy: What is a mother-to-child bond? Why is family bond important?


Possible answers to Questions 3.1


As we learnt in Topic 2, lone atoms are unstable (except noble gases) because they have incomplete energy levels. They become stable by losing, gaining or sharing electrons. When this happens the atoms come together and an attraction, called chemical bond, is formed between them.


A chemical bond is the attraction between atoms, formed when they gain, lose or share electrons to become stable. Like human beings, most atoms need one another.


The different ways of becoming stable, that is losing, gaining, and sharing electrons lead to different types of bond, namely:

  1. Ionic bond
  2. Covalent bond
  3. Metallic bond