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Encyclopedia > Catenation

Catenation is the ability of a chemical element to form covalent bonds with itself, resulting in ring, chain and cage molecules. The element most well known for its catenation is carbon, with organic chemistry being essentially the study of catenated carbon structures (otherwise known as catenae). However, carbon is by no means the only element capable of forming such catenae, and several other main group elements are capable of forming an expansive range of catenae. A chemical element, often called simply element, is a chemical substance that cannot be divided or changed into other chemical substances by any ordinary chemical technique. ... Covalently bonded hydrogen and carbon in a molecule of methane. ... General Name, Symbol, Number carbon, C, 6 Chemical series nonmetals Group, Period, Block 14, 2, p Appearance black (graphite) colorless (diamond) Atomic mass 12. ... Organic chemistry is the part of chemistry concerned with the composition, structure, properties, reactions and synthesis of organic compounds. ...


The ability of an element to catenate is primarily based on the bond energy of the element to itself. This ability is also affected by a range of steric and electronic factors, including the electronegativity of the element in question, the molecular orbital hybridisation and the ability to form different kinds of covalent bond. For example, carbon has the ability to form both sigma and pi bonds to itself. This is due to an overlap between pi-electron orbitals, allowing electron density to be shared and thus stabilising the bond. Silicon, on the other hand has negligible overlap between pi-orbitals, and thus tends not to form pi-bonds by preference. As a result, silicon - contrary to popular belief - has a relatively poor capacity for catenation. In chemistry, bond energy (E) is a measure of bond strength in a chemical bond. ... Electronegativity is a measure of the ability of an atom or molecule to attract electrons in the context of a chemical bond. ... Electron atomic and molecular orbitals In quantum chemistry (electronic structure theory), the molecular electronic states, i. ... General Name, Symbol, Number silicon, Si, 14 Chemical series metalloids Group, Period, Block 14, 3, p Appearance dark gray, bluish tinge Atomic mass 28. ...


The ability of certain main group elements to catenate is currently the subject of research into inorganic polymers.


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Catenation > Home (1421 words)
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Catenation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (254 words)
Catenation is the ability of a chemical element to form covalent bonds with itself, resulting in ring, chain and cage molecules.
The element most well known for its catenation is carbon, with organic chemistry being essentially the study of catenated carbon structures (otherwise known as catenae).
The ability of an element to catenate is primarily based on the bond energy of the element to itself.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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