Chemical bonding explains why atoms combine to form molecules and compounds. Understanding bonding and molecular structure is crucial in Chemistry as it affects properties like melting point, boiling point, solubility, and reactivity. For NEET aspirants, this chapter is high-yielding because questions often focus on bond types, molecular shapes, polarity, and hybridisation.
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1. Chemical Arithmetic |
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2. Structure of Atom |
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3. Chemical Bonding and Molecular Structure |
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4. Solutions |
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5. The Solid State |
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6. Gaseous State |
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7. Nuclear Chemisty |
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8. Chemical Equilibrium |
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9. Ionic Equilibrium |
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10. Thermodynamics |
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11. Chemical Kinetics |
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12. Electrochemistry |
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14. Surface Chemistry |
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15. Chemical Periodicity |
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16. General Principles Of Extraction Of Metals |
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17. Hydrogen |
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18. s and p-Block Elements |
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19. The d-and f-Block Elements |
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20. Co-Ordination Chemistry |
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21. Chemical Analysis |
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22. Purification, Classification & Nomenclature Of Organic Compounds |
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23. Organic Chemistry – Some Basic Principles & Techniques |
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24. Hydrocarbons |
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25. Halogen Containing Compounds |
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26. Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers |
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27. Aldehydes And Ketones |
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28. Carboxylic Acids & Their Derivatives |
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29. Nitrogen Containing Compounds |
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30. Polymers |
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31. Biomolecules |
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32. Chemistry In Action |
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33. Chemistry Formula PDF for Entrance Exam |
Atoms form bonds to achieve stability, usually by attaining a full valence shell. Major types of chemical bonds include:
1. Ionic Bond (Electrovalent Bond):
Formed between metals and non-metals
Complete transfer of electrons
Example: NaCl
Properties: High melting & boiling points, conducts electricity in molten/aqueous state
2. Covalent Bond:
Formed between non-metals
Sharing of electron pairs
Example: H₂O, CO₂
Properties: Low melting & boiling points, poor conductors
3. Coordinate or Dative Covalent Bond:
One atom contributes both electrons for bonding
Example: NH₄⁺, H₃O⁺
4. Metallic Bond:
Delocalised electrons between metal cations
Explains conductivity and malleability of metals
Lewis dot structures represent valence electrons in atoms and molecules.
Octet Rule:
Atoms generally strive for 8 electrons in the valence shell
Hydrogen follows the duet rule (2 electrons)
Exceptions: BF₃ (incomplete octet), SF₆ (expanded octet)
Lewis structures help predict bond type, lone pairs, and molecule geometry.
Polarity arises from uneven distribution of electron density.
Polar bond: Difference in electronegativity between atoms
Non-polar bond: No significant difference in electronegativity
Polar molecules: Result from polar bonds arranged asymmetrically
Non-polar molecules: Polar bonds arranged symmetrically or all non-polar bonds
Example: H₂O (polar), CO₂ (non-polar)
Polarity affects solubility, boiling point, and chemical reactivity.
VSEPR theory predicts the shape of molecules based on repulsion between electron pairs.
Shapes of Molecules:
Linear: AB₂ (CO₂)
Trigonal Planar: AB₃ (BF₃)
Tetrahedral: AB₄ (CH₄)
Trigonal Bipyramidal: AB₅ (PCl₅)
Octahedral: AB₆ (SF₆)
Effect of Lone Pairs:
Lone pairs repel bonding pairs more strongly
Causes deviations from ideal bond angles
Example: NH₃ (trigonal pyramidal), H₂O (bent)
Hybridisation is the mixing of atomic orbitals to form equivalent hybrid orbitals for bonding.
Common Types of Hybridisation:
sp: Linear geometry, 180° (BeCl₂)
sp²: Trigonal planar, 120° (BF₃)
sp³: Tetrahedral, 109.5° (CH₄)
sp³d: Trigonal bipyramidal, 90° & 120° (PCl₅)
sp³d²: Octahedral, 90° (SF₆)
Hybridisation explains bond angles, shapes, and molecular orbitals.
Resonance occurs when a molecule can be represented by two or more valid Lewis structures.
Example: Benzene (C₆H₆), O₃
Stabilizes molecules by delocalizing electrons
Questions on resonance are frequently asked in NEET.
Intermolecular forces determine physical properties of substances.
Dipole-Dipole Interaction: Between polar molecules
Hydrogen Bonding: H bonded to N, O, or F
London Dispersion Forces: Between all molecules, stronger for larger molecules
Hydrogen bonding is especially important in biological molecules like DNA and proteins.
Molecular orbital theory describes electrons in molecules using molecular orbitals.
Bonding molecular orbitals: lower energy
Antibonding molecular orbitals: higher energy
Bond order = (Nb – Na)/2
Determines stability of molecule
Example: O₂ has bond order 2 and is paramagnetic.
Draw Lewis structures before solving questions
Memorize hybridisation of common molecules
Practice VSEPR and polarity numericals
Understand trends in bond length and bond energy
This approach ensures high accuracy in NEET.
| Concept | Key Points | Examples |
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| Ionic Bond | Electron transfer | NaCl |
| Covalent Bond | Electron sharing | H₂O |
| Coordinate Bond | Donor-acceptor | NH₄⁺ |
| Metallic Bond | Delocalized electrons | Na, Mg |
| Hybridisation | Orbital mixing | CH₄ (sp³), BF₃ (sp²) |
| VSEPR Shapes | Molecular geometry | NH₃ (trigonal pyramidal) |
| Polarity | Electron distribution | H₂O (polar), CO₂ (non-polar) |
| Resonance | Delocalized electrons | Benzene, O₃ |
| Intermolecular Forces | Physical properties | H-bonding in water |
| Molecular Orbital | Stability, bond order | O₂ (bond order 2) |
Chemical Bonding and Molecular Structure is a cornerstone of NEET Chemistry. Mastery of bonding types, hybridisation, VSEPR theory, molecular polarity, and resonance is essential to answer both conceptual and application-based NEET questions. Regular practice, along with understanding NCERT examples, ensures accuracy and scoring potential. StudentBro.in provides structured, exam-oriented notes to help students excel in this high-yield chapter.