Ask questions via twitter! Message any question to @answers on twitter. We'll publish the question and send you a reply each time there's a new answer.
Next Question

Answered Question

 
 M¢37  Funded By Mahalo ? |  September 18, 2009 12:42 AM

Why is carbon's covalent bond stronger than oxygen bond to hydrogen?

What determines the strength of a covalent bond?
Interesting Question?  Yes (0)   No (0)   
RSS
 
 

Best Answer  Decided by Votes

 
October 06, 2009 08:22 PM
This has to do with electronegativity, which is the affinity an atom has for electrons.

Oxygen is more electronegative than carbon, so it has a greater affinity for the electrons that make up the covalent bond. This means that it is much easier for the oxygen atom to sort of kidnap the electrons away from the bond, leaving a positive hydrogen ion and a negative oxygen ion.

In a C-H bond, the electrons are shared more equally between the two atoms, making the bond stronger.
Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronegativity



Helpful Answer?  (0)   (0)    Tip pmacdon1 for this answer
Permalink | Report
Voted as best: davepamn, stanar, lilyloretta
   Reply  
 
 
 
October 07, 2009 03:13 AM
What is electronegativity?

Report
 
 
 
October 07, 2009 03:15 AM
What is the difference in magnitude between a H-O bond and a C-H bond?

Report
 
 

Other Answers (1)

Sort By
 
September 20, 2009 10:40 AM
A hydrogen atom attached to a relatively electronegative atom is a hydrogen bond donor.This electronegative atom is usually fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen. An electronegative atom such as fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen is a hydrogen bond acceptor, regardless of whether it is bonded to a hydrogen atom or not. An example of a hydrogen bond donor is ethanol, which has a hydrogen bonded to oxygen; an example of a hydrogen bond acceptor which does not have a hydrogen atom bonded to it is the oxygen atom on diethyl ether.

A hydrogen attached to carbon can also participate in hydrogen bonding when the carbon atom is bound to electronegative atoms, as is the case in chloroform, CHCl3. The electronegative atom attracts the electron cloud from around the hydrogen nucleus and, by decentralizing the cloud, leaves the atom with a positive partial charge. Because of the small size of hydrogen relative to other atoms and molecules, the resulting charge, though only partial, nevertheless represents a large charge density. A hydrogen bond results when this strong positive charge density attracts a lone pair of electrons on another heteroatom, which becomes the hydrogen-bond acceptor.

Helpful Answer?  (0)   (0)    Tip ajayabhi for this answer
Permalink | Report
   Reply  
 
 

Answer this Question

How tips and payments work

This question has already been resolved. You may add an answer to it but you will not be eligible to win best answer or any associated tips.

Ask a Question


140 characters left
Top of Page
Buy Mahalo Dollars with Credit Card or PayPal

Top Members

This Week All Time
  • buddawiggi
    buddawiggi
    2nd Degree Black Belt
    26710 Points
    M$774.34 Earned
  • kty2777
    kty2777
    Purple Belt with a Brown Tip
    5216 Points
    M$196.67 Earned
  • opher
    opher
    Purple Belt
    3852 Points
    M$152.92 Earned
   See All
 

Most Popular Tags

mahalo(1562)
iphone(459)
music(458)
google(346)
food(310)
online(286)
beer(276)
money(260)
movies(249)
apple(249)
aotd(235)
health(216)
video(200)
free(200)
dog(200)
   See All
 

Categories

Welcome New Members


 
 
Mahalo Dollars are the currency of Mahalo Answers.

Each Mahalo Dollar costs $1.

Once you earn more than 40 Mahalo Dollars, you can request to be paid via PayPal. Each Mahalo Dollar is currently worth $0.75 when paid out via PayPal. Learn More

 
 

Please log in to use this function.