IB ChemistryStructure 22.22.2.9
2.2.9

Physical Properties

Melting point, solubility, and conductivity depend on bonding type.

Properties Summary

Structure Type Melting/Boiling Point Solubility (Water) Conductivity
Giant Covalent Very High Insoluble No (except Graphite)
Ionic High Soluble (mostly) Only when molten/aq
Polar Covalent Medium Soluble ("Like dissolves like") No
Non-Polar Covalent Low Insoluble No

"Like Dissolves Like"

Polar solvents (water) dissolve polar/ionic solutes. Non-polar solvents (hexane) dissolve non-polar solutes. This is because the solvent–solute intermolecular forces must be comparable in strength to the forces being broken.

Think About It

Ethanol (C₂H₅OH) is miscible with water, but hexanol (C₆H₁₃OH) barely dissolves. Both have an –OH group. Why the difference?

In ethanol, the polar –OH group dominates, enabling hydrogen bonding with water. In hexanol, the long non-polar hydrocarbon chain dominates — the molecule is predominantly non-polar. "Like dissolves like" — hexanol behaves more like a non-polar substance.

← 2.2.8 IMF 2.2.10 Chromatography →