Pearson Edexcel ChemistryBonding and structure

Metallic bonding and alloys

Describe metallic bonding and explain how alloying changes the properties of metals.

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The key idea

Metallic bonding is the electrostatic attraction between a lattice of positive metal ions and a sea of delocalised electrons.This explains why metals conduct electricity and heat, and are malleable.

Metallic Bonding
positive metal ionsdelocalised electrons move

Use the labels to explain the scientific relationship shown.

Revision notes

The bit that matters

Keep the idea tight, then use the worked example to practise the exact exam wording.

1

Metallic bonding

In a metal, each atom contributes its outer electrons to a 'sea' of delocalised electrons that are free to move throughout the structure.The remaining positive metal ions are arranged in a regular lattice.The metallic bond is the strong electrostatic attraction between the positive ions and the surrounding delocalised electrons.The number of outer electrons each atom contributes affects the strength of the bond.

2

Properties from metallic bonding

The sea of delocalised electrons explains the key properties of metals: electrical conductivity (electrons carry charge), thermal conductivity (electrons transfer kinetic energy), malleability and ductility (layers of ions slide while electrons maintain bonding).The high melting and boiling points of most metals are due to the strong electrostatic attraction between the ions and the electron sea.

3

Alloys

An alloy is a mixture of a metal with one or more other elements.Common alloys include steel (iron + carbon), bronze (copper + tin) and brass (copper + zinc).Alloying introduces atoms of different sizes into the lattice, distorting the regular arrangement.This prevents layers from sliding easily, making alloys harder and less malleable than pure metals.

4

Shape memory alloys and nanoparticles

Shape memory alloys, such as nitinol (nickel + titanium), can return to a memorised shape when heated.They are used in medical devices such as stents and dental braces.Nanoparticles of metals have a very high surface area to volume ratio compared with bulk metals, which can give them different properties such as improved catalytic activity.

Key terms

Definitions to learn

Metallic bonding

The electrostatic attraction between a lattice of positive metal ions and a surrounding sea of delocalised electrons.

Delocalised electron

An electron that is free to move throughout the metallic lattice rather than being associated with a single atom.

Malleable

Able to be beaten or pressed into shape without breaking.

Ductile

Able to be drawn into a wire without breaking.

Alloy

A mixture of a metal with one or more other elements, usually designed to have improved properties.

Shape memory alloy

An alloy that returns to a predetermined shape when heated, e.g. nitinol.

Worked example

Explain why metals are good conductors of electricity.

1

Metal atoms lose their outer electrons to form positive ions.

2

These electrons become delocalised and move freely throughout the structure.

3

When a voltage is applied, the delocalised electrons can move in one direction.

4

This flow of electrons constitutes an electric current.

Final answer

Metals conduct because of the sea of delocalised electrons that carry charge through the structure.

Exam habit

For any metallic property question, always mention the sea of delocalised electrons and the lattice of positive ions as the starting point.

Watch out

Do not say metals conduct because they have 'free electrons in their outer shell'.The outer electrons are delocalised — they do not belong to one atom.

Examiner tips

How to score full marks

  • 1All three metallic properties (conductivity, malleability, high melting point) must be explained using the sea of delocalised electrons — state it explicitly.
  • 2For alloy hardness, say 'different-sized atoms distort the lattice, preventing layers from sliding' — all three parts needed.
  • 3Do not confuse 'delocalised electrons' in metals with 'free electrons in the outer shell' — they are not attached to a single atom.
Practice questions

Try these yourself

Open each answer only after you have explained the full chemical process.

1State what is meant by delocalised electrons in a metal.[1 mark]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe where these electrons come from and where they are found.
Electrons that have left their parent atoms and are free to move throughout the metallic lattice (1).
2Explain why metals are malleable (can be beaten into shape).[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe what happens to the layers when force is applied.
Layers of metal ions can slide over each other (1) while the delocalised electrons maintain the attraction between layers (1), so the metal does not break (1).
3Explain why metals have high melting points.[2 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Link to the strength of metallic bonding.
Strong electrostatic attraction between positive metal ions and the delocalised electrons (1) requires a large amount of energy to overcome (1).
4Define an alloy.[1 mark]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Use the words 'mixture' and 'metal'.
A mixture of a metal with one or more other elements (1).
5Explain why alloys are generally harder than pure metals.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe the effect of differently sized atoms on layer movement.
In an alloy, atoms of different sizes are present (1); the differently sized atoms distort the lattice (1), making it harder for layers to slide over each other (1).
6State one example of an alloy and its composition.[1 mark]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Recall a named alloy.
Any correct example, e.g. steel — iron with carbon (1); bronze — copper with tin (1); brass — copper with zinc (1).
7Compare the electrical conductivity of a pure metal with that of an alloy and explain the difference.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Consider how lattice regularity affects electron movement.
Pure metals are generally better conductors (1); in an alloy the irregular lattice (due to different-sized atoms) impedes the movement of delocalised electrons (1), reducing conductivity (1).
8Explain, in terms of structure and bonding, why metals can be drawn into wires (are ductile).[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Apply the sliding-layers argument.
When a force is applied, layers of metal ions slide over each other (1) because the delocalised electrons re-form bonds with new neighbours (1), so the structure is maintained and the metal can be stretched without breaking (1).
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