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Chemical bond

A chemical bond is a lasting attraction between atoms or ions that enables the formation of molecules, crystals, and other structures. The bond may result from the electrostatic force between oppositely charged ions as in ionic bonds, or through the sharing of electrons as in covalent bonds. The strength of chemical bonds varies considerably: there are "strong bonds" or "primary bonds" such as covalent, ionic and metallic bonds, and "weak bonds" or "secondary bonds" such as dipole–dipole interactions, the London dispersion force, and hydrogen bonding.

Covalent bonding of two hydrogen atoms to form a hydrogen molecule, H
2
. In (a) the two nuclei are surrounded by a cloud of two electrons in the bonding orbital that holds the molecule together. (b) shows hydrogen's antibonding orbital, which is higher in energy and is normally not occupied by any electrons.

Since opposite electric charges attract, the negatively charged electrons surrounding the nucleus and the positively charged protons within a nucleus attract each other. Electrons shared between two nuclei will be attracted to both of them. "Constructive quantum mechanical wavefunction interference"[1] stabilizes the paired nuclei (see Theories of chemical bonding). Bonded nuclei maintain an optimal distance (the bond distance) balancing attractive and repulsive effects explained quantitatively by quantum theory.[2][3]

The atoms in molecules, crystals, metals and other forms of matter are held together by chemical bonds, which determine the structure and properties of matter.

All bonds can be described by quantum theory, but, in practice, simplified rules and other theories allow chemists to predict the strength, directionality, and polarity of bonds.[4] The octet rule and VSEPR theory are examples. More sophisticated theories are valence bond theory, which includes orbital hybridization[5] and resonance,[6] and molecular orbital theory[7] which includes the linear combination of atomic orbitals and ligand field theory. Electrostatics are used to describe bond polarities and the effects they have on chemical substances.

Overview of main types of chemical bonds

A chemical bond is an attraction between atoms. This attraction may be seen as the result of different behaviors of the outermost or valence electrons of atoms. These behaviors merge into each other seamlessly in various circumstances, so that there is no clear line to be drawn between them. However it remains useful and customary to differentiate between different types of bond, which result in different properties of condensed matter.

In the simplest view of a covalent bond, one or more electrons (often a pair of electrons) are drawn into the space between the two atomic nuclei. Energy is released by bond formation.[8] This is not as a result of reduction in potential energy, because the attraction of the two electrons to the two protons is offset by the electron-electron and proton-proton repulsions. Instead, the release of energy (and hence stability of the bond) arises from the reduction in kinetic energy due to the electrons being in a more spatially distributed (i.e. longer de Broglie wavelength) orbital compared with each electron being confined closer to its respective nucleus.[9] These bonds exist between two particular identifiable atoms and have a direction in space, allowing them to be shown as single connecting lines between atoms in drawings, or modeled as sticks between spheres in models.

In a polar covalent bond, one or more electrons are unequally shared between two nuclei. Covalent bonds often result in the formation of small collections of better-connected atoms called molecules, which in solids and liquids are bound to other molecules by forces that are often much weaker than the covalent bonds that hold the molecules internally together. Such weak intermolecular bonds give organic molecular substances, such as waxes and oils, their soft bulk character, and their low melting points (in liquids, molecules must cease most structured or oriented contact with each other). When covalent bonds link long chains of atoms in large molecules, however (as in polymers such as nylon), or when covalent bonds extend in networks through solids that are not composed of discrete molecules (such as diamond or quartz or the silicate minerals in many types of rock) then the structures that result may be both strong and tough, at least in the direction oriented correctly with networks of covalent bonds.[10] Also, the melting points of such covalent polymers and networks increase greatly.

In a simplified view of an ionic bond, the bonding electron is not shared at all, but transferred. In this type of bond, the outer atomic orbital of one atom has a vacancy which allows the addition of one or more electrons. These newly added electrons potentially occupy a lower energy-state (effectively closer to more nuclear charge) than they experience in a different atom. Thus, one nucleus offers a more tightly bound position to an electron than does another nucleus, with the result that one atom may transfer an electron to the other. This transfer causes one atom to assume a net positive charge, and the other to assume a net negative charge. The bond then results from electrostatic attraction between the positive and negatively charged ions. Ionic bonds may be seen as extreme examples of polarization in covalent bonds. Often, such bonds have no particular orientation in space, since they result from equal electrostatic attraction of each ion to all ions around them. Ionic bonds are strong (and thus ionic substances require high temperatures to melt) but also brittle, since the forces between ions are short-range and do not easily bridge cracks and fractures. This type of bond gives rise to the physical characteristics of crystals of classic mineral salts, such as table salt.

A less often mentioned type of bonding is metallic bonding. In this type of bonding, each atom in a metal donates one or more electrons to a "sea" of electrons that reside between many metal atoms. In this sea, each electron is free (by virtue of its wave nature) to be associated with a great many atoms at once. The bond results because the metal atoms become somewhat positively charged due to loss of their electrons while the electrons remain attracted to many atoms, without being part of any given atom. Metallic bonding may be seen as an extreme example of delocalization of electrons over a large system of covalent bonds, in which every atom participates. This type of bonding is often very strong (resulting in the tensile strength of metals). However, metallic bonding is more collective in nature than other types, and so they allow metal crystals to more easily deform, because they are composed of atoms attracted to each other, but not in any particularly-oriented ways. This results in the malleability of metals. The cloud of electrons in metallic bonding causes the characteristically good electrical and thermal conductivity of metals, and also their shiny lustre that reflects most frequencies of white light.

History

 
Examples of Lewis dot diagrams used to represent electrons in the chemical bonds between atoms, here showing carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O). Lewis diagrams were developed in 1916 by Gilbert N. Lewis to describe chemical bonding and are still widely used today. Each line segment or pair of dots represents a pair of electrons. Pairs located between atoms represent bonds.

Early speculations about the nature of the chemical bond, from as early as the 12th century, supposed that certain types of chemical species were joined by a type of chemical affinity. In 1704, Sir Isaac Newton famously outlined his atomic bonding theory, in "Query 31" of his Opticks, whereby atoms attach to each other by some "force". Specifically, after acknowledging the various popular theories in vogue at the time, of how atoms were reasoned to attach to each other, i.e. "hooked atoms", "glued together by rest", or "stuck together by conspiring motions", Newton states that he would rather infer from their cohesion, that "particles attract one another by some force, which in immediate contact is exceedingly strong, at small distances performs the chemical operations, and reaches not far from the particles with any sensible effect."

In 1819, on the heels of the invention of the voltaic pile, Jöns Jakob Berzelius developed a theory of chemical combination stressing the electronegative and electropositive characters of the combining atoms. By the mid 19th century, Edward Frankland, F.A. Kekulé, A.S. Couper, Alexander Butlerov, and Hermann Kolbe, building on the theory of radicals, developed the theory of valency, originally called "combining power", in which compounds were joined owing to an attraction of positive and negative poles. In 1904, Richard Abegg proposed his rule that the difference between the maximum and minimum valencies of an element is often eight. At this point, valency was still an empirical number based only on chemical properties.

However the nature of the atom became clearer with Ernest Rutherford's 1911 discovery that of an atomic nucleus surrounded by electrons in which he quoted Nagaoka rejected Thomson's model on the grounds that opposite charges are impenetrable. In 1904, Nagaoka proposed an alternative planetary model of the atom in which a positively charged center is surrounded by a number of revolving electrons, in the manner of Saturn and its rings.[11]

Nagaoka's model made two predictions:

  • a very massive atomic center (in analogy to a very massive planet)
  • electrons revolving around the nucleus, bound by electrostatic forces (in analogy to the rings revolving around Saturn, bound by gravitational forces.)

Rutherford mentions Nagaoka's model in his 1911 paper in which the atomic nucleus is proposed.[12]

At the 1911 Solvay Conference, in the discussion of what could regulate energy differences between atoms, Max Planck stated: "The intermediaries could be the electrons."[13] These nuclear models suggested that electrons determine chemical behavior.

Next came Niels Bohr's 1913 model of a nuclear atom with electron orbits. In 1916, chemist Gilbert N. Lewis developed the concept of electron-pair bonds, in which two atoms may share one to six electrons, thus forming the single electron bond, a single bond, a double bond, or a triple bond; in Lewis's own words, "An electron may form a part of the shell of two different atoms and cannot be said to belong to either one exclusively."[14]

Also in 1916, Walther Kossel put forward a theory similar to Lewis' only his model assumed complete transfers of electrons between atoms, and was thus a model of ionic bonding. Both Lewis and Kossel structured their bonding models on that of Abegg's rule (1904).

Niels Bohr also proposed a model of the chemical bond in 1913. According to his model for a diatomic molecule, the electrons of the atoms of the molecule form a rotating ring whose plane is perpendicular to the axis of the molecule and equidistant from the atomic nuclei. The dynamic equilibrium of the molecular system is achieved through the balance of forces between the forces of attraction of nuclei to the plane of the ring of electrons and the forces of mutual repulsion of the nuclei. The Bohr model of the chemical bond took into account the Coulomb repulsion – the electrons in the ring are at the maximum distance from each other.[15][16]

In 1927, the first mathematically complete quantum description of a simple chemical bond, i.e. that produced by one electron in the hydrogen molecular ion, H2+, was derived by the Danish physicist Øyvind Burrau.[17] This work showed that the quantum approach to chemical bonds could be fundamentally and quantitatively correct, but the mathematical methods used could not be extended to molecules containing more than one electron. A more practical, albeit less quantitative, approach was put forward in the same year by Walter Heitler and Fritz London. The Heitler–London method forms the basis of what is now called valence bond theory.[18] In 1929, the linear combination of atomic orbitals molecular orbital method (LCAO) approximation was introduced by Sir John Lennard-Jones, who also suggested methods to derive electronic structures of molecules of F2 (fluorine) and O2 (oxygen) molecules, from basic quantum principles. This molecular orbital theory represented a covalent bond as an orbital formed by combining the quantum mechanical Schrödinger atomic orbitals which had been hypothesized for electrons in single atoms. The equations for bonding electrons in multi-electron atoms could not be solved to mathematical perfection (i.e., analytically), but approximations for them still gave many good qualitative predictions and results. Most quantitative calculations in modern quantum chemistry use either valence bond or molecular orbital theory as a starting point, although a third approach, density functional theory, has become increasingly popular in recent years.

In 1933, H. H. James and A. S. Coolidge carried out a calculation on the dihydrogen molecule that, unlike all previous calculation which used functions only of the distance of the electron from the atomic nucleus, used functions which also explicitly added the distance between the two electrons.[19] With up to 13 adjustable parameters they obtained a result very close to the experimental result for the dissociation energy. Later extensions have used up to 54 parameters and gave excellent agreement with experiments. This calculation convinced the scientific community that quantum theory could give agreement with experiment. However this approach has none of the physical pictures of the valence bond and molecular orbital theories and is difficult to extend to larger molecules.

Bonds in chemical formulas

Because atoms and molecules are three-dimensional, it is difficult to use a single method to indicate orbitals and bonds. In molecular formulas the chemical bonds (binding orbitals) between atoms are indicated in different ways depending on the type of discussion. Sometimes, some details are neglected. For example, in organic chemistry one is sometimes concerned only with the functional group of the molecule. Thus, the molecular formula of ethanol may be written in conformational form, three-dimensional form, full two-dimensional form (indicating every bond with no three-dimensional directions), compressed two-dimensional form (CH3–CH2–OH), by separating the functional group from another part of the molecule (C2H5OH), or by its atomic constituents (C2H6O), according to what is discussed. Sometimes, even the non-bonding valence shell electrons (with the two-dimensional approximate directions) are marked, e.g. for elemental carbon .'C'. Some chemists may also mark the respective orbitals, e.g. the hypothetical ethene−4 anion (\/C=C/\ −4) indicating the possibility of bond formation.

Strong chemical bonds

Typical bond lengths in pm
and bond energies in kJ/mol.
[20]
Bond lengths can be converted to Å
by division by 100 (1 Å = 100 pm).
Bond Length
(pm)
Energy
(kJ/mol)
H — Hydrogen
H–H 74 436
H–O 96 467
H–F 92 568
H–Cl 127 432
C — Carbon
C–H 109 413
C–C 154 347
C–C= 151
=C–C≡ 147
=C–C= 148
C=C 134 614
C≡C 120 839
C–N 147 308
C–O 143 358
C=O 745
C≡O 1,072
C–F 134 488
C–Cl 177 330
N — Nitrogen
N–H 101 391
N–N 145 170
N≡N 110 945
O — Oxygen
O–O 148 146
O=O 121 495
F, Cl, Br, I — Halogens
F–F 142 158
Cl–Cl 199 243
Br–H 141 366
Br–Br 228 193
I–H 161 298
I–I 267 151

Strong chemical bonds are the intramolecular forces that hold atoms together in molecules. A strong chemical bond is formed from the transfer or sharing of electrons between atomic centers and relies on the electrostatic attraction between the protons in nuclei and the electrons in the orbitals.

The types of strong bond differ due to the difference in electronegativity of the constituent elements. Electronegativity is the tendency for an atom of a given chemical element to attract shared electrons when forming a chemical bond, where the higher the associated electronegativity then the more it attracts electrons. Electronegativity serves as a simple way to quantitatively estimate the bond energy, which characterizes a bond along the continuous scale from covalent to ionic bonding. A large difference in electronegativity leads to more polar (ionic) character in the bond.

Ionic bond

 
Crystal structure of sodium chloride (NaCl) with sodium cations (Na+) in purple and chloride anions (Cl) in green. The yellow stipples represent the electrostatic force between the ions of opposite charge.

Ionic bonding is a type of electrostatic interaction between atoms that have a large electronegativity difference. There is no precise value that distinguishes ionic from covalent bonding, but an electronegativity difference of over 1.7 is likely to be ionic while a difference of less than 1.7 is likely to be covalent.[21] Ionic bonding leads to separate positive and negative ions. Ionic charges are commonly between −3e to +3e. Ionic bonding commonly occurs in metal salts such as sodium chloride (table salt). A typical feature of ionic bonds is that the species form into ionic crystals, in which no ion is specifically paired with any single other ion in a specific directional bond. Rather, each species of ion is surrounded by ions of the opposite charge, and the spacing between it and each of the oppositely charged ions near it is the same for all surrounding atoms of the same type. It is thus no longer possible to associate an ion with any specific other single ionized atom near it. This is a situation unlike that in covalent crystals, where covalent bonds between specific atoms are still discernible from the shorter distances between them, as measured via such techniques as X-ray diffraction.

Ionic crystals may contain a mixture of covalent and ionic species, as for example salts of complex acids such as sodium cyanide, NaCN. X-ray diffraction shows that in NaCN, for example, the bonds between sodium cations (Na+) and the cyanide anions (CN) are ionic, with no sodium ion associated with any particular cyanide. However, the bonds between the carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) atoms in cyanide are of the covalent type, so that each carbon is strongly bound to just one nitrogen, to which it is physically much closer than it is to other carbons or nitrogens in a sodium cyanide crystal.

When such crystals are melted into liquids, the ionic bonds are broken first because they are non-directional and allow the charged species to move freely. Similarly, when such salts dissolve into water, the ionic bonds are typically broken by the interaction with water but the covalent bonds continue to hold. For example, in solution, the cyanide ions, still bound together as single CN ions, move independently through the solution, as do sodium ions, as Na+. In water, charged ions move apart because each of them are more strongly attracted to a number of water molecules than to each other. The attraction between ions and water molecules in such solutions is due to a type of weak dipole-dipole type chemical bond. In melted ionic compounds, the ions continue to be attracted to each other, but not in any ordered or crystalline way.

Covalent bond

 
Non-polar covalent bonds in methane (CH4). The Lewis structure shows electrons shared between C and H atoms.

Covalent bonding is a common type of bonding in which two or more atoms share valence electrons more or less equally. The simplest and most common type is a single bond in which two atoms share two electrons. Other types include the double bond, the triple bond, one- and three-electron bonds, the three-center two-electron bond and three-center four-electron bond.

In non-polar covalent bonds, the electronegativity difference between the bonded atoms is small, typically 0 to 0.3. Bonds within most organic compounds are described as covalent. The figure shows methane (CH4), in which each hydrogen forms a covalent bond with the carbon. See sigma bonds and pi bonds for LCAO descriptions of such bonding.[22]

Molecules that are formed primarily from non-polar covalent bonds are often immiscible in water or other polar solvents, but much more soluble in non-polar solvents such as hexane.

A polar covalent bond is a covalent bond with a significant ionic character. This means that the two shared electrons are closer to one of the atoms than the other, creating an imbalance of charge. Such bonds occur between two atoms with moderately different electronegativities and give rise to dipole–dipole interactions. The electronegativity difference between the two atoms in these bonds is 0.3 to 1.7.

Single and multiple bonds

A single bond between two atoms corresponds to the sharing of one pair of electrons. The Hydrogen (H) atom has one valence electron. Two Hydrogen atoms can then form a molecule, held together by the shared pair of electrons. Each H atom now has the noble gas electron configuration of helium (He). The pair of shared electrons forms a single covalent bond. The electron density of these two bonding electrons in the region between the two atoms increases from the density of two non-interacting H atoms.

 
Two p-orbitals forming a pi-bond.

A double bond has two shared pairs of electrons, one in a sigma bond and one in a pi bond with electron density concentrated on two opposite sides of the internuclear axis. A triple bond consists of three shared electron pairs, forming one sigma and two pi bonds. An example is nitrogen. Quadruple and higher bonds are very rare and occur only between certain transition metal atoms.

Coordinate covalent bond (dipolar bond)

 
Adduct of ammonia and boron trifluoride

A coordinate covalent bond is a covalent bond in which the two shared bonding electrons are from the same one of the atoms involved in the bond. For example, boron trifluoride (BF3) and ammonia (NH3) form an adduct or coordination complex F3B←NH3 with a B–N bond in which a lone pair of electrons on N is shared with an empty atomic orbital on B. BF3 with an empty orbital is described as an electron pair acceptor or Lewis acid, while NH3 with a lone pair that can be shared is described as an electron-pair donor or Lewis base. The electrons are shared roughly equally between the atoms in contrast to ionic bonding. Such bonding is shown by an arrow pointing to the Lewis acid. (In the Figure, solid lines are bonds in the plane of the diagram, wedged bonds point towards the observer, and dashed bonds point away from the observer.)

Transition metal complexes are generally bound by coordinate covalent bonds. For example, the ion Ag+ reacts as a Lewis acid with two molecules of the Lewis base NH3 to form the complex ion Ag(NH3)2+, which has two Ag←N coordinate covalent bonds.

Metallic bonding

In metallic bonding, bonding electrons are delocalized over a lattice of atoms. By contrast, in ionic compounds, the locations of the binding electrons and their charges are static. The free movement or delocalization of bonding electrons leads to classical metallic properties such as luster (surface light reflectivity), electrical and thermal conductivity, ductility, and high tensile strength.

Intermolecular bonding

There are several types of weak bonds that can be formed between two or more molecules which are not covalently bound. Intermolecular forces cause molecules to attract or repel each other. Often, these forces influence physical characteristics (such as the melting point) of a substance.

Van der Waals forces are interactions between closed-shell molecules. They include both Coulombic interactions between partial charges in polar molecules, and Pauli repulsions between closed electrons shells.[23]: 696 

Keesom forces are the forces between the permanent dipoles of two polar molecules.[23]: 701  London dispersion forces are the forces between induced dipoles of different molecules.[23]: 703  There can also be an interaction between a permanent dipole in one molecule and an induced dipole in another molecule.[23]: 702 

Hydrogen bonds of the form A--H•••B occur when A and B are two highly electronegative atoms (usually N, O or F) such that A forms a highly polar covalent bond with H so that H has a partial positive charge, and B has a lone pair of electrons which is attracted to this partial positive charge and forms a hydrogen bond.[23]: 702  Hydrogen bonds are responsible for the high boiling points of water and ammonia with respect to their heavier analogues. In some cases a similar halogen bond can be formed by a halogen atom located between two electronegative atoms on different molecules.

At short distances, repulsive forces between atoms also become important.[23]: 705-6 

Theories of chemical bonding

In the (unrealistic) limit of "pure" ionic bonding, electrons are perfectly localized on one of the two atoms in the bond. Such bonds can be understood by classical physics. The force between the atoms depends on isotropic continuum electrostatic potentials. The magnitude of the force is in simple proportion to the product of the two ionic charges according to Coulomb's law.[citation needed]

Covalent bonds are better understood by valence bond (VB) theory or molecular orbital (MO) theory. The properties of the atoms involved can be understood using concepts such as oxidation number, formal charge, and electronegativity. The electron density within a bond is not assigned to individual atoms, but is instead delocalized between atoms. In valence bond theory, bonding is conceptualized as being built up from electron pairs that are localized and shared by two atoms via the overlap of atomic orbitals. The concepts of orbital hybridization and resonance augment this basic notion of the electron pair bond. In molecular orbital theory, bonding is viewed as being delocalized and apportioned in orbitals that extend throughout the molecule and are adapted to its symmetry properties, typically by considering linear combinations of atomic orbitals (LCAO). Valence bond theory is more chemically intuitive by being spatially localized, allowing attention to be focused on the parts of the molecule undergoing chemical change. In contrast, molecular orbitals are more "natural" from a quantum mechanical point of view, with orbital energies being physically significant and directly linked to experimental ionization energies from photoelectron spectroscopy. Consequently, valence bond theory and molecular orbital theory are often viewed as competing but complementary frameworks that offer different insights into chemical systems. As approaches for electronic structure theory, both MO and VB methods can give approximations to any desired level of accuracy, at least in principle. However, at lower levels, the approximations differ, and one approach may be better suited for computations involving a particular system or property than the other.[citation needed]

Unlike the spherically symmetrical Coulombic forces in pure ionic bonds, covalent bonds are generally directed and anisotropic. These are often classified based on their symmetry with respect to a molecular plane as sigma bonds and pi bonds. In the general case, atoms form bonds that are intermediate between ionic and covalent, depending on the relative electronegativity of the atoms involved. Bonds of this type are known as polar covalent bonds.[24]

References

  1. ^ Levine, Daniel S.; Head-Gordon, Martin (2020-09-29). "Clarifying the quantum mechanical origin of the covalent chemical bond". Nature Communications. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 11 (1): 4893. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-18670-8. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 7524788. PMID 32994392. S2CID 222157102.
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  20. ^ "Bond Energies". Chemistry Libre Texts. 2 October 2013. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
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External links

  • W. Locke (1997). Introduction to Molecular Orbital Theory. Retrieved May 18, 2005.
  • Carl R. Nave (2005). HyperPhysics. Retrieved May 18, 2005.
  • Linus Pauling and the Nature of the Chemical Bond: A Documentary History. Retrieved February 29, 2008.

chemical, bond, confused, with, molecular, binding, chemical, bond, lasting, attraction, between, atoms, ions, that, enables, formation, molecules, crystals, other, structures, bond, result, from, electrostatic, force, between, oppositely, charged, ions, ionic. Not to be confused with Molecular binding A chemical bond is a lasting attraction between atoms or ions that enables the formation of molecules crystals and other structures The bond may result from the electrostatic force between oppositely charged ions as in ionic bonds or through the sharing of electrons as in covalent bonds The strength of chemical bonds varies considerably there are strong bonds or primary bonds such as covalent ionic and metallic bonds and weak bonds or secondary bonds such as dipole dipole interactions the London dispersion force and hydrogen bonding Covalent bonding of two hydrogen atoms to form a hydrogen molecule H2 In a the two nuclei are surrounded by a cloud of two electrons in the bonding orbital that holds the molecule together b shows hydrogen s antibonding orbital which is higher in energy and is normally not occupied by any electrons Since opposite electric charges attract the negatively charged electrons surrounding the nucleus and the positively charged protons within a nucleus attract each other Electrons shared between two nuclei will be attracted to both of them Constructive quantum mechanical wavefunction interference 1 stabilizes the paired nuclei see Theories of chemical bonding Bonded nuclei maintain an optimal distance the bond distance balancing attractive and repulsive effects explained quantitatively by quantum theory 2 3 The atoms in molecules crystals metals and other forms of matter are held together by chemical bonds which determine the structure and properties of matter All bonds can be described by quantum theory but in practice simplified rules and other theories allow chemists to predict the strength directionality and polarity of bonds 4 The octet rule and VSEPR theory are examples More sophisticated theories are valence bond theory which includes orbital hybridization 5 and resonance 6 and molecular orbital theory 7 which includes the linear combination of atomic orbitals and ligand field theory Electrostatics are used to describe bond polarities and the effects they have on chemical substances Contents 1 Overview of main types of chemical bonds 2 History 3 Bonds in chemical formulas 4 Strong chemical bonds 4 1 Ionic bond 4 2 Covalent bond 4 2 1 Single and multiple bonds 4 2 2 Coordinate covalent bond dipolar bond 4 3 Metallic bonding 5 Intermolecular bonding 6 Theories of chemical bonding 7 References 8 External linksOverview of main types of chemical bondsA chemical bond is an attraction between atoms This attraction may be seen as the result of different behaviors of the outermost or valence electrons of atoms These behaviors merge into each other seamlessly in various circumstances so that there is no clear line to be drawn between them However it remains useful and customary to differentiate between different types of bond which result in different properties of condensed matter In the simplest view of a covalent bond one or more electrons often a pair of electrons are drawn into the space between the two atomic nuclei Energy is released by bond formation 8 This is not as a result of reduction in potential energy because the attraction of the two electrons to the two protons is offset by the electron electron and proton proton repulsions Instead the release of energy and hence stability of the bond arises from the reduction in kinetic energy due to the electrons being in a more spatially distributed i e longer de Broglie wavelength orbital compared with each electron being confined closer to its respective nucleus 9 These bonds exist between two particular identifiable atoms and have a direction in space allowing them to be shown as single connecting lines between atoms in drawings or modeled as sticks between spheres in models In a polar covalent bond one or more electrons are unequally shared between two nuclei Covalent bonds often result in the formation of small collections of better connected atoms called molecules which in solids and liquids are bound to other molecules by forces that are often much weaker than the covalent bonds that hold the molecules internally together Such weak intermolecular bonds give organic molecular substances such as waxes and oils their soft bulk character and their low melting points in liquids molecules must cease most structured or oriented contact with each other When covalent bonds link long chains of atoms in large molecules however as in polymers such as nylon or when covalent bonds extend in networks through solids that are not composed of discrete molecules such as diamond or quartz or the silicate minerals in many types of rock then the structures that result may be both strong and tough at least in the direction oriented correctly with networks of covalent bonds 10 Also the melting points of such covalent polymers and networks increase greatly In a simplified view of an ionic bond the bonding electron is not shared at all but transferred In this type of bond the outer atomic orbital of one atom has a vacancy which allows the addition of one or more electrons These newly added electrons potentially occupy a lower energy state effectively closer to more nuclear charge than they experience in a different atom Thus one nucleus offers a more tightly bound position to an electron than does another nucleus with the result that one atom may transfer an electron to the other This transfer causes one atom to assume a net positive charge and the other to assume a net negative charge The bond then results from electrostatic attraction between the positive and negatively charged ions Ionic bonds may be seen as extreme examples of polarization in covalent bonds Often such bonds have no particular orientation in space since they result from equal electrostatic attraction of each ion to all ions around them Ionic bonds are strong and thus ionic substances require high temperatures to melt but also brittle since the forces between ions are short range and do not easily bridge cracks and fractures This type of bond gives rise to the physical characteristics of crystals of classic mineral salts such as table salt A less often mentioned type of bonding is metallic bonding In this type of bonding each atom in a metal donates one or more electrons to a sea of electrons that reside between many metal atoms In this sea each electron is free by virtue of its wave nature to be associated with a great many atoms at once The bond results because the metal atoms become somewhat positively charged due to loss of their electrons while the electrons remain attracted to many atoms without being part of any given atom Metallic bonding may be seen as an extreme example of delocalization of electrons over a large system of covalent bonds in which every atom participates This type of bonding is often very strong resulting in the tensile strength of metals However metallic bonding is more collective in nature than other types and so they allow metal crystals to more easily deform because they are composed of atoms attracted to each other but not in any particularly oriented ways This results in the malleability of metals The cloud of electrons in metallic bonding causes the characteristically good electrical and thermal conductivity of metals and also their shiny lustre that reflects most frequencies of white light HistoryMain articles History of chemistry and History of molecular theory nbsp Examples of Lewis dot diagrams used to represent electrons in the chemical bonds between atoms here showing carbon C hydrogen H and oxygen O Lewis diagrams were developed in 1916 by Gilbert N Lewis to describe chemical bonding and are still widely used today Each line segment or pair of dots represents a pair of electrons Pairs located between atoms represent bonds Early speculations about the nature of the chemical bond from as early as the 12th century supposed that certain types of chemical species were joined by a type of chemical affinity In 1704 Sir Isaac Newton famously outlined his atomic bonding theory in Query 31 of his Opticks whereby atoms attach to each other by some force Specifically after acknowledging the various popular theories in vogue at the time of how atoms were reasoned to attach to each other i e hooked atoms glued together by rest or stuck together by conspiring motions Newton states that he would rather infer from their cohesion that particles attract one another by some force which in immediate contact is exceedingly strong at small distances performs the chemical operations and reaches not far from the particles with any sensible effect In 1819 on the heels of the invention of the voltaic pile Jons Jakob Berzelius developed a theory of chemical combination stressing the electronegative and electropositive characters of the combining atoms By the mid 19th century Edward Frankland F A Kekule A S Couper Alexander Butlerov and Hermann Kolbe building on the theory of radicals developed the theory of valency originally called combining power in which compounds were joined owing to an attraction of positive and negative poles In 1904 Richard Abegg proposed his rule that the difference between the maximum and minimum valencies of an element is often eight At this point valency was still an empirical number based only on chemical properties However the nature of the atom became clearer with Ernest Rutherford s 1911 discovery that of an atomic nucleus surrounded by electrons in which he quoted Nagaoka rejected Thomson s model on the grounds that opposite charges are impenetrable In 1904 Nagaoka proposed an alternative planetary model of the atom in which a positively charged center is surrounded by a number of revolving electrons in the manner of Saturn and its rings 11 Nagaoka s model made two predictions a very massive atomic center in analogy to a very massive planet electrons revolving around the nucleus bound by electrostatic forces in analogy to the rings revolving around Saturn bound by gravitational forces Rutherford mentions Nagaoka s model in his 1911 paper in which the atomic nucleus is proposed 12 At the 1911 Solvay Conference in the discussion of what could regulate energy differences between atoms Max Planck stated The intermediaries could be the electrons 13 These nuclear models suggested that electrons determine chemical behavior Next came Niels Bohr s 1913 model of a nuclear atom with electron orbits In 1916 chemist Gilbert N Lewis developed the concept of electron pair bonds in which two atoms may share one to six electrons thus forming the single electron bond a single bond a double bond or a triple bond in Lewis s own words An electron may form a part of the shell of two different atoms and cannot be said to belong to either one exclusively 14 Also in 1916 Walther Kossel put forward a theory similar to Lewis only his model assumed complete transfers of electrons between atoms and was thus a model of ionic bonding Both Lewis and Kossel structured their bonding models on that of Abegg s rule 1904 Niels Bohr also proposed a model of the chemical bond in 1913 According to his model for a diatomic molecule the electrons of the atoms of the molecule form a rotating ring whose plane is perpendicular to the axis of the molecule and equidistant from the atomic nuclei The dynamic equilibrium of the molecular system is achieved through the balance of forces between the forces of attraction of nuclei to the plane of the ring of electrons and the forces of mutual repulsion of the nuclei The Bohr model of the chemical bond took into account the Coulomb repulsion the electrons in the ring are at the maximum distance from each other 15 16 In 1927 the first mathematically complete quantum description of a simple chemical bond i e that produced by one electron in the hydrogen molecular ion H2 was derived by the Danish physicist Oyvind Burrau 17 This work showed that the quantum approach to chemical bonds could be fundamentally and quantitatively correct but the mathematical methods used could not be extended to molecules containing more than one electron A more practical albeit less quantitative approach was put forward in the same year by Walter Heitler and Fritz London The Heitler London method forms the basis of what is now called valence bond theory 18 In 1929 the linear combination of atomic orbitals molecular orbital method LCAO approximation was introduced by Sir John Lennard Jones who also suggested methods to derive electronic structures of molecules of F2 fluorine and O2 oxygen molecules from basic quantum principles This molecular orbital theory represented a covalent bond as an orbital formed by combining the quantum mechanical Schrodinger atomic orbitals which had been hypothesized for electrons in single atoms The equations for bonding electrons in multi electron atoms could not be solved to mathematical perfection i e analytically but approximations for them still gave many good qualitative predictions and results Most quantitative calculations in modern quantum chemistry use either valence bond or molecular orbital theory as a starting point although a third approach density functional theory has become increasingly popular in recent years In 1933 H H James and A S Coolidge carried out a calculation on the dihydrogen molecule that unlike all previous calculation which used functions only of the distance of the electron from the atomic nucleus used functions which also explicitly added the distance between the two electrons 19 With up to 13 adjustable parameters they obtained a result very close to the experimental result for the dissociation energy Later extensions have used up to 54 parameters and gave excellent agreement with experiments This calculation convinced the scientific community that quantum theory could give agreement with experiment However this approach has none of the physical pictures of the valence bond and molecular orbital theories and is difficult to extend to larger molecules Bonds in chemical formulasBecause atoms and molecules are three dimensional it is difficult to use a single method to indicate orbitals and bonds In molecular formulas the chemical bonds binding orbitals between atoms are indicated in different ways depending on the type of discussion Sometimes some details are neglected For example in organic chemistry one is sometimes concerned only with the functional group of the molecule Thus the molecular formula of ethanol may be written in conformational form three dimensional form full two dimensional form indicating every bond with no three dimensional directions compressed two dimensional form CH3 CH2 OH by separating the functional group from another part of the molecule C2H5OH or by its atomic constituents C2H6O according to what is discussed Sometimes even the non bonding valence shell electrons with the two dimensional approximate directions are marked e g for elemental carbon C Some chemists may also mark the respective orbitals e g the hypothetical ethene 4 anion C C 4 indicating the possibility of bond formation Strong chemical bondsTypical bond lengths in pmand bond energies in kJ mol 20 Bond lengths can be converted to Aby division by 100 1 A 100 pm Bond Length pm Energy kJ mol H HydrogenH H 74 436H O 96 467H F 92 568H Cl 127 432C CarbonC H 109 413C C 154 347C C 151 C C 147 C C 148C C 134 614C C 120 839C N 147 308C O 143 358C O 745C O 1 072C F 134 488C Cl 177 330N NitrogenN H 101 391N N 145 170N N 110 945O OxygenO O 148 146O O 121 495F Cl Br I HalogensF F 142 158Cl Cl 199 243Br H 141 366Br Br 228 193I H 161 298I I 267 151Strong chemical bonds are the intramolecular forces that hold atoms together in molecules A strong chemical bond is formed from the transfer or sharing of electrons between atomic centers and relies on the electrostatic attraction between the protons in nuclei and the electrons in the orbitals The types of strong bond differ due to the difference in electronegativity of the constituent elements Electronegativity is the tendency for an atom of a given chemical element to attract shared electrons when forming a chemical bond where the higher the associated electronegativity then the more it attracts electrons Electronegativity serves as a simple way to quantitatively estimate the bond energy which characterizes a bond along the continuous scale from covalent to ionic bonding A large difference in electronegativity leads to more polar ionic character in the bond Ionic bond Main article Ionic bonding nbsp Crystal structure of sodium chloride NaCl with sodium cations Na in purple and chloride anions Cl in green The yellow stipples represent the electrostatic force between the ions of opposite charge Ionic bonding is a type of electrostatic interaction between atoms that have a large electronegativity difference There is no precise value that distinguishes ionic from covalent bonding but an electronegativity difference of over 1 7 is likely to be ionic while a difference of less than 1 7 is likely to be covalent 21 Ionic bonding leads to separate positive and negative ions Ionic charges are commonly between 3e to 3e Ionic bonding commonly occurs in metal salts such as sodium chloride table salt A typical feature of ionic bonds is that the species form into ionic crystals in which no ion is specifically paired with any single other ion in a specific directional bond Rather each species of ion is surrounded by ions of the opposite charge and the spacing between it and each of the oppositely charged ions near it is the same for all surrounding atoms of the same type It is thus no longer possible to associate an ion with any specific other single ionized atom near it This is a situation unlike that in covalent crystals where covalent bonds between specific atoms are still discernible from the shorter distances between them as measured via such techniques as X ray diffraction Ionic crystals may contain a mixture of covalent and ionic species as for example salts of complex acids such as sodium cyanide NaCN X ray diffraction shows that in NaCN for example the bonds between sodium cations Na and the cyanide anions CN are ionic with no sodium ion associated with any particular cyanide However the bonds between the carbon C and nitrogen N atoms in cyanide are of the covalent type so that each carbon is strongly bound to just one nitrogen to which it is physically much closer than it is to other carbons or nitrogens in a sodium cyanide crystal When such crystals are melted into liquids the ionic bonds are broken first because they are non directional and allow the charged species to move freely Similarly when such salts dissolve into water the ionic bonds are typically broken by the interaction with water but the covalent bonds continue to hold For example in solution the cyanide ions still bound together as single CN ions move independently through the solution as do sodium ions as Na In water charged ions move apart because each of them are more strongly attracted to a number of water molecules than to each other The attraction between ions and water molecules in such solutions is due to a type of weak dipole dipole type chemical bond In melted ionic compounds the ions continue to be attracted to each other but not in any ordered or crystalline way Covalent bond Main article Covalent bond nbsp Non polar covalent bonds in methane CH4 The Lewis structure shows electrons shared between C and H atoms Covalent bonding is a common type of bonding in which two or more atoms share valence electrons more or less equally The simplest and most common type is a single bond in which two atoms share two electrons Other types include the double bond the triple bond one and three electron bonds the three center two electron bond and three center four electron bond In non polar covalent bonds the electronegativity difference between the bonded atoms is small typically 0 to 0 3 Bonds within most organic compounds are described as covalent The figure shows methane CH4 in which each hydrogen forms a covalent bond with the carbon See sigma bonds and pi bonds for LCAO descriptions of such bonding 22 Molecules that are formed primarily from non polar covalent bonds are often immiscible in water or other polar solvents but much more soluble in non polar solvents such as hexane A polar covalent bond is a covalent bond with a significant ionic character This means that the two shared electrons are closer to one of the atoms than the other creating an imbalance of charge Such bonds occur between two atoms with moderately different electronegativities and give rise to dipole dipole interactions The electronegativity difference between the two atoms in these bonds is 0 3 to 1 7 Single and multiple bonds A single bond between two atoms corresponds to the sharing of one pair of electrons The Hydrogen H atom has one valence electron Two Hydrogen atoms can then form a molecule held together by the shared pair of electrons Each H atom now has the noble gas electron configuration of helium He The pair of shared electrons forms a single covalent bond The electron density of these two bonding electrons in the region between the two atoms increases from the density of two non interacting H atoms nbsp Two p orbitals forming a pi bond A double bond has two shared pairs of electrons one in a sigma bond and one in a pi bond with electron density concentrated on two opposite sides of the internuclear axis A triple bond consists of three shared electron pairs forming one sigma and two pi bonds An example is nitrogen Quadruple and higher bonds are very rare and occur only between certain transition metal atoms Coordinate covalent bond dipolar bond nbsp Adduct of ammonia and boron trifluorideA coordinate covalent bond is a covalent bond in which the two shared bonding electrons are from the same one of the atoms involved in the bond For example boron trifluoride BF3 and ammonia NH3 form an adduct or coordination complex F3B NH3 with a B N bond in which a lone pair of electrons on N is shared with an empty atomic orbital on B BF3 with an empty orbital is described as an electron pair acceptor or Lewis acid while NH3 with a lone pair that can be shared is described as an electron pair donor or Lewis base The electrons are shared roughly equally between the atoms in contrast to ionic bonding Such bonding is shown by an arrow pointing to the Lewis acid In the Figure solid lines are bonds in the plane of the diagram wedged bonds point towards the observer and dashed bonds point away from the observer Transition metal complexes are generally bound by coordinate covalent bonds For example the ion Ag reacts as a Lewis acid with two molecules of the Lewis base NH3 to form the complex ion Ag NH3 2 which has two Ag N coordinate covalent bonds Metallic bonding Main article Metallic bonding In metallic bonding bonding electrons are delocalized over a lattice of atoms By contrast in ionic compounds the locations of the binding electrons and their charges are static The free movement or delocalization of bonding electrons leads to classical metallic properties such as luster surface light reflectivity electrical and thermal conductivity ductility and high tensile strength Intermolecular bondingMain article Intermolecular force There are several types of weak bonds that can be formed between two or more molecules which are not covalently bound Intermolecular forces cause molecules to attract or repel each other Often these forces influence physical characteristics such as the melting point of a substance Van der Waals forces are interactions between closed shell molecules They include both Coulombic interactions between partial charges in polar molecules and Pauli repulsions between closed electrons shells 23 696 Keesom forces are the forces between the permanent dipoles of two polar molecules 23 701 London dispersion forces are the forces between induced dipoles of different molecules 23 703 There can also be an interaction between a permanent dipole in one molecule and an induced dipole in another molecule 23 702 Hydrogen bonds of the form A H B occur when A and B are two highly electronegative atoms usually N O or F such that A forms a highly polar covalent bond with H so that H has a partial positive charge and B has a lone pair of electrons which is attracted to this partial positive charge and forms a hydrogen bond 23 702 Hydrogen bonds are responsible for the high boiling points of water and ammonia with respect to their heavier analogues In some cases a similar halogen bond can be formed by a halogen atom located between two electronegative atoms on different molecules At short distances repulsive forces between atoms also become important 23 705 6 Theories of chemical bondingIn the unrealistic limit of pure ionic bonding electrons are perfectly localized on one of the two atoms in the bond Such bonds can be understood by classical physics The force between the atoms depends on isotropic continuum electrostatic potentials The magnitude of the force is in simple proportion to the product of the two ionic charges according to Coulomb s law citation needed Covalent bonds are better understood by valence bond VB theory or molecular orbital MO theory The properties of the atoms involved can be understood using concepts such as oxidation number formal charge and electronegativity The electron density within a bond is not assigned to individual atoms but is instead delocalized between atoms In valence bond theory bonding is conceptualized as being built up from electron pairs that are localized and shared by two atoms via the overlap of atomic orbitals The concepts of orbital hybridization and resonance augment this basic notion of the electron pair bond In molecular orbital theory bonding is viewed as being delocalized and apportioned in orbitals that extend throughout the molecule and are adapted to its symmetry properties typically by considering linear combinations of atomic orbitals LCAO Valence bond theory is more chemically intuitive by being spatially localized allowing attention to be focused on the parts of the molecule undergoing chemical change In contrast molecular orbitals are more natural from a quantum mechanical point of view with orbital energies being physically significant and directly linked to experimental ionization energies from photoelectron spectroscopy Consequently valence bond theory and molecular orbital theory are often viewed as competing but complementary frameworks that offer different insights into chemical systems As approaches for electronic structure theory both MO and VB methods can give approximations to any desired level of accuracy at least in principle However at lower levels the approximations differ and one approach may be better suited for computations involving a particular system or property than the other citation needed Unlike the spherically symmetrical Coulombic forces in pure ionic bonds covalent bonds are generally directed and anisotropic These are often classified based on their symmetry with respect to a molecular plane as sigma bonds and pi bonds In the general case atoms form bonds that are intermediate between ionic and covalent depending on the relative electronegativity of the atoms involved Bonds of this type are known as polar covalent bonds 24 References Levine Daniel S Head Gordon Martin 2020 09 29 Clarifying the quantum mechanical origin of the covalent chemical bond Nature Communications Springer Science and Business Media LLC 11 1 4893 doi 10 1038 s41467 020 18670 8 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 7524788 PMID 32994392 S2CID 222157102 Pauling L 1931 The nature of the chemical bond Application of results obtained from the quantum mechanics and from a theory of paramagnetic susceptibility to the structure of molecules Journal of the American Chemical Society 53 4 1367 1400 doi 10 1021 ja01355a027 Hund F 1928 Zur Deutung der Molekelspektren IV Zeitschrift fur Physik in German 51 11 12 759 795 doi 10 1007 BF01400239 ISSN 1434 6001 S2CID 121366097 Frenking Gernot Krapp Andreas 2007 01 15 Unicorns in the world of chemical bonding models Journal of Computational Chemistry 28 1 15 24 doi 10 1002 jcc 20543 PMID 17109434 S2CID 7504671 Archived from the original on Apr 8 2023 Jensen Frank 1999 Introduction to Computational Chemistry John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 471 98425 2 Pauling Linus 1960 The Concept of Resonance The Nature of the Chemical Bond An Introduction to Modern Structural Chemistry 3rd ed Cornell University Press pp 10 13 ISBN 978 0801403330 Gillespie R J 2004 Teaching molecular geometry with the VSEPR model Journal of Chemical Education 81 3 298 304 Bibcode 2004JChEd 81 298G doi 10 1021 ed081p298 Housecroft Catherine E Sharpe Alan G 2005 Inorganic Chemistry 2nd ed Pearson Prentice Hal p 100 ISBN 0130 39913 2 Rioux F 2001 The Covalent Bond in H2 The Chemical Educator 6 5 288 290 doi 10 1007 s00897010509a S2CID 97871973 Housecroft Catherine E Sharpe Alan G 2005 Inorganic Chemistry 2nd ed Pearson Prentice Hal p 100 ISBN 0130 39913 2 B Bryson 2003 A Short History of Nearly Everything Broadway Books ISBN 0 7679 0817 1 The Genesis of the Bohr Atom John L Heilbron and Thomas S Kuhn Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences Vol 1 1969 pp vi 211 290 81 pages University of California Press Original Proceedings of the 1911 Solvay Conference published 1912 THEORIE DU RAYONNEMENT ET LES QUANTA RAPPORTS ET DISCUSSIONS DELA Reunion tenue a Bruxelles du 30 octobre au 3 novembre 1911 Sous les Auspices dk M E SOLVAY Publies par MM P LANGEVIN et M de BROGLIE Translated from the French p 127 Lewis Gilbert N 1916 The Atom and the Molecule Journal of the American Chemical Society 38 4 772 doi 10 1021 ja02261a002 S2CID 95865413 a copy Archived 2021 04 18 at the Wayback Machine Pais Abraham 1986 Inward Bound Of Matter and Forces in the Physical World New York Oxford University Press pp 228 230 ISBN 978 0 19 851971 3 Svidzinsky Anatoly A Marlan O Scully Dudley R Herschbach 2005 Bohr s 1913 molecular model revisited PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 34 11985 11988 arXiv physics 0508161 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10211985S doi 10 1073 pnas 0505778102 PMC 1186029 PMID 16103360 Archived PDF from the original on 2018 07 18 Laidler K J 1993 The World of Physical Chemistry Oxford University Press p 346 ISBN 978 0 19 855919 1 Heitler W London F 1927 Wechselwirkung neutraler Atome und homoopolare Bindung nach der Quantenmechanik Interaction of neutral atoms and homeopolar bonds according to quantum mechanics Zeitschrift fur Physik 44 6 7 455 472 Bibcode 1927ZPhy 44 455H doi 10 1007 bf01397394 S2CID 119739102 English translation in Hettema H 2000 Quantum Chemistry Classic Scientific Papers World Scientific p 140 ISBN 978 981 02 2771 5 Retrieved 2012 02 05 James H H Coolidge A S 1933 The Ground State of the Hydrogen Molecule Journal of Chemical Physics 1 12 825 835 Bibcode 1933JChPh 1 825J doi 10 1063 1 1749252 Bond Energies Chemistry Libre Texts 2 October 2013 Retrieved 2019 02 25 Atkins Peter Loretta Jones 1997 Chemistry Molecules Matter and Change New York W H Freeman amp Co pp 294 295 ISBN 978 0 7167 3107 8 Streitwieser Andrew Heathcock Clayton H Kosower Edward M 1992 Introduction to organic chemistry Heathcock Clayton H Kosower Edward M 4th ed New York Macmillan pp 250 ISBN 978 0024181701 OCLC 24501305 a b c d e f Atkins Peter de Paula Julio 2002 Physical Chemistry 7th ed W H Freeman pp 696 706 ISBN 0 7167 3539 3 Ouellette Robert J Rawn J David 2015 Polar Covalent Bond Science Direct Retrieved 14 September 2023 A polar covalent bond exists when atoms with different electronegativities share electrons in a covalent bond External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Chemical bond nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chemical bonding W Locke 1997 Introduction to Molecular Orbital Theory Retrieved May 18 2005 Carl R Nave 2005 HyperPhysics Retrieved May 18 2005 Linus Pauling and the Nature of the Chemical Bond A Documentary History Retrieved February 29 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chemical bond amp oldid 1199128498, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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