Jump to content

Ionization terminology


Amaton

Recommended Posts

Coming from a confused introductory chemistry student...

 

My problem began while I was reading over the chapter on aqueous reactions. Rather than go into chronological detail about my confusion, I'll just ask the more fundamental questions first to see if there's a root misconception involved.

 

1) Okay, so when a compound is said to be molecular, it contains covalent bonds. (so, "covalent" and "molecular" are, in a sense, interchangeable) Correct?

 

2) Ionization vs dissociation: An ionic electrolyte dissociates in aqueous solution, while a molecular electrolyte is said to ionize. Is this right? I'm not sure if the terms are somewhat interchangeable or if they're even precise, but it seems to make sense... A molecular compound consists of covalently bonded atoms, so when such an electrolyte breaks up into ions, it changes i.e. ionizes. On the other hand, ions are already present in some form with an ionic compound, so there's not really any "ionization" going on -- the component ions simply need to separate, i.e. "dissociate". Am I picking this up correctly? Or is there no hard-cut distinction between the terms?

 

3) Are acids ionic or molecular compounds? And what of bases?

Edited by Amaton
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1) Molecules are formed covalently, but the terms are not interchangeable, they're related.

 

2) Ionisation is where a chemical species becomes charged by some means.

Dissociation is the splitting of certain compounds into ions.

 

3) Hydrochloric acid is a covalent molecule. In its standard state it is a gaseous molecule; when mixed in a solvent, such as water, it becomes an aqueous mixture. It is therefore both covalent, a molecule, and dissociates into ions. It is not itself an ionic compound, however, because in its standard state, it is not ionic, it is covalent.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1) Molecules are formed covalently, but the terms are not interchangeable, they're related.

 

2) Ionisation is where a chemical species becomes charged by some means.

Dissociation is the splitting of certain compounds into ions.

 

3) Hydrochloric acid is a covalent molecule. In its standard state it is a gaseous molecule; when mixed in a solvent, such as water, it becomes an aqueous mixture. It is therefore both covalent, a molecule, and dissociates into ions. It is not itself an ionic compound, however, because in its standard state, it is not ionic, it is covalent.

 

Thank you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.