How atoms bond - George Zaidan and Charles Morton

1,162,635 views ・ 2013-10-15

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Most atoms don't ride solo,
0
7027
2377
00:09
instead they bond with other atoms.
1
9404
2721
00:12
And bonds can form between atoms
2
12125
1618
00:13
of the same element
3
13743
1200
00:14
or atoms of different elements.
4
14943
2122
00:17
You've probably imagined bonding as a tug of war.
5
17065
3125
00:20
If one atom is really strong,
6
20190
1776
00:21
it can pull one or more electrons
7
21966
2144
00:24
off another atom.
8
24110
1665
00:25
Then you end up with one negatively charged ion
9
25775
3026
00:28
and one positively charged ion.
10
28801
2241
00:31
And the attraction between these opposite charges
11
31042
2769
00:33
is called an ionic bond.
12
33811
2164
00:35
This is the kind of sharing
13
35975
1258
00:37
where you just give away your toy to someone else
14
37233
2760
00:39
and then never get it back.
15
39993
1965
00:43
Table salt, sodium chloride,
16
43324
1681
00:45
is held together by ionic bonds.
17
45005
2752
00:47
Every atom of sodium gives up one electron
18
47757
2574
00:50
to every atom of chlorine,
19
50331
1921
00:52
ions are formed,
20
52252
1110
00:53
and those ions arrange themselves
21
53362
1882
00:55
in a 3D grid called a lattice,
22
55244
2667
00:57
in which every sodium ion
23
57911
1530
00:59
is bonded to six chloride ions,
24
59441
2226
01:01
and every chloride ion is bonded
25
61667
1831
01:03
to six sodium ions.
26
63498
2208
01:05
The chlorine atoms never give
27
65706
1766
01:07
the sodium atoms their electrons back.
28
67472
2453
01:10
Now, these transactions aren't always so cut-and-dried.
29
70585
3099
01:13
If one atom doesn't completely overwhelm the other,
30
73684
2938
01:16
they can actually share each other's electrons.
31
76622
2694
01:19
This is like a pot luck
32
79316
1503
01:20
where you and a friend each bring a dish
33
80819
2100
01:22
and then both of you share both dishes.
34
82919
3001
01:25
Each atom is attracted to the shared electrons
35
85920
1433
01:27
in between them,
36
87353
1299
01:28
and this attraction is called a covalent bond.
37
88652
3074
01:31
The proteins and DNA in our bodies,
38
91726
2031
01:33
for example,
39
93757
827
01:34
are held together largely by these covalent bonds.
40
94584
3191
01:37
Some atoms can covalently bond
41
97775
1583
01:39
with just one other atom,
42
99358
1892
01:41
others with many more.
43
101250
1667
01:42
The number of other atoms
44
102917
1450
01:44
one atom can bond with
45
104367
1323
01:45
depends on how its electrons are arranged.
46
105690
2887
01:48
So, how are electrons arranged?
47
108577
2966
01:51
Every atom of a pure, unbonded element
48
111543
2429
01:53
is electrically neutral
49
113972
1421
01:55
because it contains the same number
50
115393
1436
01:56
of protons in the nucleus
51
116829
1629
01:58
as it does electrons around the nucleus.
52
118458
2789
02:01
And not all of those electrons are available for bonding.
53
121247
3175
02:04
Only the outermost electrons,
54
124422
1998
02:06
the ones in orbitals furthest from the nucleus,
55
126420
2264
02:08
the ones with the most energy,
56
128684
1654
02:10
only those participate in bonding.
57
130338
2393
02:12
By the way, this applies to ionic bonding too.
58
132731
3077
02:15
Remember sodium chloride?
59
135808
1679
02:17
Well, the electron that sodium loses
60
137487
1913
02:19
is the one furthest from its nucleus,
61
139400
2204
02:21
and the orbital that electron occupies
62
141604
1806
02:23
when it goes over to chlorine
63
143410
1624
02:25
is also the one furthest from its nucleus.
64
145034
3249
02:28
But back to covalent bonding.
65
148283
1883
02:30
Carbon has four electrons
66
150166
1526
02:31
that are free to bond,
67
151692
1105
02:32
nitrogen has three,
68
152797
1336
02:34
oxygen two.
69
154133
1279
02:35
So, carbon is likely to form four bonds,
70
155412
1862
02:37
nitrogen three,
71
157274
832
02:38
and oxygen two.
72
158106
1497
02:39
Hydrogen only has one electron,
73
159603
1700
02:41
so it can only form one bond.
74
161303
2107
02:43
In some special cases,
75
163410
1480
02:44
atoms can form more bonds
76
164890
1542
02:46
than you'd expect,
77
166432
1090
02:47
but they better have a really good reason to do so,
78
167522
2476
02:49
or things tend to fly apart.
79
169998
2079
02:52
Groups of atoms
80
172077
1022
02:53
that share electrons covalently with each other
81
173099
2013
02:55
are called molecules.
82
175112
1707
02:57
They can be small.
83
177557
1021
02:58
For example, every molecule of oxygen gas
84
178578
2034
03:00
is made up of just two oxygen atoms
85
180612
2475
03:03
bonded to each other.
86
183087
1436
03:04
Or they could be really, really big.
87
184523
1669
03:06
Human chromosome 13 is just two molecules,
88
186192
3187
03:09
but each one has over 37 billion atoms.
89
189379
3643
03:13
And this neighborhood,
90
193022
1188
03:14
this city of atoms,
91
194210
973
03:15
is held together by the humble chemical bond.
92
195183
3047
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7