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Chemistry Articles

Bond Order for Covalent Bonds

The very premise of a covalent bond is electron sharing. As two atoms share one electron each to form one covalent bond, they may likely share more than once and form more bonds. This information on the number of connections between two atoms is revealed from the Bond Order. 

So, the Bond Order measures the number of bonds between the two atoms in a molecule. The number can be integers like 1, 2, or 3 for single, double, or triple bonds or non-integers like 0.5, 1.3, 1.5, etc.

Kekulé Structures

August Kekulé (1866) was the first to propose the alternating single and double bond structure of benzene that can only be possible if carbon could join other carbon atoms and form a ring.

kekule structures benzene

He believed that the tetravalent nature of carbon was responsible for showing catenation, a property of self-linking that allowed carbon to form long chains with itself and other atoms. August Kekulé tried to express this type of bonding by using lines (-) as linkages.

Drawing Organic Structures- Lewis Structures

The first time the use of two dots or a colon (:) to represent two electrons acting as connecting links between the two atoms was proposed by G.N. Lewis in 1916.

In his landmark paper, ‘the atom and the molecules,’ he attempted to draw molecular structures using dots to represent the covalent nature of the chemical bonds, now popularly known as the Lewis structures.

So, a molecule of Cl2 was Cl : Cl, two electrons connecting two Cl atoms.

Molecular models for organic structure representation

Molecular models are tools used for classroom or research to visualize better and interpret three-dimensional structures of organic molecules. The toolkit can be made of wood, plastic, metal, or other materials.

These models are digitally represented using computer graphics covered under molecular modelling, a branch of chemistry that uses computational and theoretical methods to model and mimic the molecule's behaviour in chemical and biological environments.

Cleavage Property of Crystalline Solids

Differentiation between Crystalline and Amorphous solids based on the Cleavage Property 

If a crystalline solid is cut with a sharp object, it would always give parts with smooth edges whereas an amorphous solid would cut into surfaces with rough, uneven edges. Crystalline solids are therefore said to have cleavage property, and amorphous solids do not show cleavage property.

Crystalline Versus Amorphous Solids- Anisotropy and Isotropy

Anisotropy and Isotropy

Amorphous solids are said to be isotropic, and crystalline solids are anisotropic for their physical property measurements.

Isotropy comes from the Greek word; iso means same and tropos means direction. The name rightly indicates that for the amorphous solids; the physical property measurements are same in all the directions. The same correlation applies for anisotropy that means no same direction. It means that for the crystalline solids, the physical property measurements are not same in all the directions.

Bond Line or Skeletal Formula

What is a Bond-Line or Skeletal Formula?

Carbon and Hydrogen containing bonds are chemically inert; still, they form the backbone of many organic compounds. They provide a skeletal framework that can contain other heteroatoms or functional groups. 

Such a carbon-hydrogen-containing chain of compounds together with other atoms or groups of atoms are conveniently represented using zig-zag lines, called the bond-line or skeletal formula.

Dash and Wedge line structures- 3D structure representation of organic molecules

Certain conventions are used to represent three-dimensional structures of organic molecules on paper. Using simple lines, solid (dark), and dashed wedges, a 3D image of a molecule can be perceived on two-dimensional paper.

line, dashed wedge, dark wedge 3D structure representation organic molecules

A thick solid (or heavy) line or a solid wedge indicates a bond lying above the plane of the paper and projecting towards the observer.