IB ChemistryStructure 22.22.2.5
2.2.5

Bond Polarity

How electronegativity differences create polar covalent bonds.

📘 IB Definition

"Bond polarity results from the difference in electronegativities of the bonded atoms." Electronegativity is the ability of an atom to attract a shared pair of electrons toward itself in a covalent bond.

Key Electronegativity Values

Element Pauling EN Element Pauling EN
F 4.0 C 2.6
O 3.4 H 2.2
N / Cl 3.0 Na 0.9

The Bonding Continuum

ΔEN = 0
Pure covalent
e.g. H₂, Cl₂
0 < ΔEN < 1.7
Polar covalent
e.g. H–Cl
ΔEN > 1.7
Ionic
e.g. NaCl

In a polar bond, the more electronegative atom carries a partial negative charge (δ⁻) and the less electronegative atom carries a partial positive charge (δ⁺). This creates a bond dipole.

⚠️ Examiner Trap

The 1.7 threshold is a guideline, not a rule. Some compounds with ΔEN > 1.7 are still covalent (e.g. HF, ΔEN = 1.8). The IB treats bonding as a spectrum, not a binary classification.

← 2.2.4 VSEPR2.2.6 Molecular Polarity →