OCR Gateway ChemistryBonding and structure

Covalent bonding

Draw dot-and-cross diagrams and relate structure to properties for covalent substances.

Start here

The key idea

Covalent bonds form when non-metal atoms share pairs of electrons.Simple molecular substances have low melting points; giant covalent structures have very high melting points.

Covalent Bonding
HClshared pairone covalent bond

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

Formation of covalent bonds

A covalent bond forms when two non-metal atoms each contribute one electron to a shared pair.Both atoms are held together by the electrostatic attraction between their positive nuclei and the shared pair of electrons.The number of covalent bonds an atom forms equals the number of additional electrons it needs to achieve a full outer shell.

2

Simple molecular structures

Substances like water (H₂O), methane (CH₄), ammonia (NH₃) and chlorine (Cl₂) consist of small molecules held together by strong covalent bonds within the molecule.However, the forces between separate molecules (intermolecular forces) are weak.This gives these substances low melting and boiling points.They generally do not conduct electricity because they have no charged particles.

3

Giant covalent structures

Some non-metal elements and compounds form giant covalent (macromolecular) structures, where every atom is bonded to several others by strong covalent bonds throughout the whole structure.Diamond, graphite and silicon dioxide (SiO₂) are examples.These have very high melting points because vast amounts of energy are needed to break the many strong covalent bonds.

4

Diamond and graphite

Diamond has a tetrahedral giant covalent structure in which each carbon forms four strong covalent bonds; it is very hard and does not conduct electricity.Graphite has a layered structure in which each carbon forms three covalent bonds, leaving one delocalised electron per atom; these electrons allow graphite to conduct electricity.The layers in graphite can slide over each other, making it a useful lubricant.

Key terms

Definitions to learn

Covalent bond

A shared pair of electrons between two non-metal atoms.

Simple molecular substance

A substance made of small molecules with strong covalent bonds inside and weak intermolecular forces between molecules.

Giant covalent structure

A structure in which all atoms are joined by strong covalent bonds throughout, giving high melting points.

Intermolecular force

A weak force of attraction between separate molecules in a simple molecular substance.

Delocalised electron

An electron not associated with a single atom but free to move through a structure (as in graphite or metals).

Dot-and-cross diagram

A diagram showing the outer electrons of atoms as dots or crosses to illustrate covalent bonding.

Worked example

Draw a dot-and-cross diagram to show the bonding in a water molecule (H₂O).

1

Oxygen has 6 outer electrons; each hydrogen has 1.

2

Oxygen needs 2 more electrons to complete its outer shell.

3

Each hydrogen atom shares its electron with the oxygen, forming 2 covalent bonds.

4

Draw O with 2 bonding pairs and 2 lone pairs; each H with one bonding pair.

Final answer

Each O–H bond is a shared pair of electrons (one from O, one from H).

Exam habit

When asked about properties of covalent substances, first identify whether the structure is simple molecular or giant covalent — they have very different properties.

Watch out

Do not say covalent compounds have high melting points as a rule.Simple molecular substances have low melting points; giant covalent structures have high melting points.

Examiner tips

How to score full marks

  • 1For melting point questions, identify the structure FIRST: simple molecular = low; giant covalent = very high.
  • 2When explaining graphite's conductivity, always say 'delocalised electrons that are free to move' — mentioning electrons alone is not enough.
  • 3Covalent bonds are strong; intermolecular forces are weak — examiners deduct marks if you confuse these when explaining melting points.
Practice questions

Try these yourself

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

1Define a covalent bond.[1 mark]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Use the words 'shared' and 'electrons'.
A covalent bond is a shared pair of electrons between two non-metal atoms (1).
2State the number of covalent bonds in a molecule of methane (CH₄).[1 mark]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Count the bonds between C and each H.
4 covalent bonds (1).
3Explain why simple molecular substances such as iodine have low melting points.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Distinguish intermolecular forces from covalent bonds.
Simple molecular substances have weak intermolecular forces between molecules (1); little energy is needed to overcome these forces (1), so the melting point is low. The covalent bonds within the molecules are strong but are not broken on melting (1).
4Explain why diamond has a very high melting point.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Describe the giant covalent structure.
Diamond has a giant covalent structure in which each carbon atom is bonded to four others (1), with strong covalent bonds throughout (1); a large amount of energy is needed to break these bonds (1).
5State one difference in structure between diamond and graphite.[2 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Compare the number of bonds per carbon.
In diamond each carbon is bonded to four others in a 3D structure (1); in graphite each carbon is bonded to three others in layers (1).
6Explain why graphite conducts electricity.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Consider the delocalised electrons.
Each carbon in graphite forms only three covalent bonds (1), leaving one delocalised electron per atom (1) that can move along the layers and carry charge (1).
7Compare the boiling points of methane (CH₄) and silicon dioxide (SiO₂) and explain the difference in terms of structure and bonding.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Identify the structure type of each compound.
Methane has a much lower boiling point (1). Methane is a simple molecular substance with weak intermolecular forces (1); silicon dioxide has a giant covalent structure with strong covalent bonds throughout (1), requiring much more energy to break (1).
8Explain why most simple covalent compounds do not conduct electricity.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Consider the particles and their charge.
Simple covalent compounds consist of neutral molecules (1) with no free electrons or ions (1), so they cannot carry charge (1).
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