Chemistry 1301A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 35: Non-Covalent Interactions, Ionic Bonding, Calorie

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Bond strength: amount of energy that must be supplied to break the bond (usually expressed in units of either kilocalories per mole (kcal/ mole) or kilojoules per mole (kj/mole)) Important tips: a kilocalorie is the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 liter of water by 1 c. Important point: when water is present, covalent bonds are much stronger than ionic bonds. In ionic bonds, electrons are transferred rather than shared. However, substances with standard covalent bonds seem to be weaker than those with ionic bonds because the ionic bonds tend to form a lattice structure, that makes them much stronger. Typical covalent bonds are stronger than thermal energies by a factor of 100, so bonds do not normally break apart in living organisms or other places. In living organisms, they are broken down during specific chemical reaction that are highly controlled by enzymes. Ionic bonds form by the gain and loss of electrons.

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