IB Chemistry Structure 2 2.1 The Ionic Model 2.1.2
2.1.2

The Ionic Bond

Electrostatic Attraction, Electronegativity Differences, and Formula Deduction.

1. The Definitive Definition

Examiner Requirement

"The electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions."

2. The Bonding Continuum

Bonding is rarely "100% Ionic." It exists on a spectrum governed by the Difference in Electronegativity (\(\Delta\chi\)).

Covalent

\(\Delta\chi < 1.8\)

Electron Sharing

→ Increasing Ionic Character →

Ionic

\(\Delta\chi > 1.8\)

Electron Transfer

Common Pitfall: Aluminum Chloride (\(AlCl_3\))

Often assumed to be ionic (Metal + Non-metal). However, its \(\Delta\chi\) is only ≈ 1.5. It acts as a covalent molecule, subliming at low temperatures.

Reason: The high charge density of \(Al^{3+}\) polarizes the \(Cl^-\) cloud (Fajans' Rules).

3. Formula Deduction

Worked Example: The Cross-Over Method

Problem: Deduce the formula for Calcium Phosphate given ions: \(Ca^{2+}\) and \(PO_4^{3-}\)

Ca²⁺
Valency 2
PO₄³⁻
Valency 3

1. Cross the charges to the opposite subscript:

2. Result:

\( Ca_3(PO_4)_2 \)

Check Your Understanding

Q1. Define the Ionic Bond.

Q2. Why does AlCl₃ sublime at low temperatures?

← 2.1.1 Ion Formation 2.1.3 Ionic Lattice →