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  2. Metallic bonding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallic_bonding

    The strong bonding of metals in liquid form demonstrates that the energy of a metallic bond is not highly dependent on the direction of the bond; this lack of bond directionality is a direct consequence of electron delocalization, and is best understood in contrast to the directional bonding of covalent bonds.

  3. Metal hydroxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal_hydroxide

    In chemistry, metal hydroxides are a family of compounds of the form M n+ (OH) n, where M is a metal. They consist of hydroxide (OH −) anions and metallic cations, [1] and are often strong bases. Some metal hydroxides, such as alkali metal hydroxides, ionize completely when dissolved.

  4. Hydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydride

    Bonds between hydrogen and the other elements range from being highly ionic to somewhat covalent. Some hydrides, e.g. boron hydrides, do not conform to classical electron counting rules and the bonding is described in terms of multi-centered bonds, whereas the interstitial hydrides often involve metallic bonding.

  5. Chemical bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_bond

    The bond results because the metal atoms become somewhat positively charged due to loss of their electrons while the electrons remain attracted to many atoms, without being part of any given atom. Metallic bonding may be seen as an extreme example of delocalization of electrons over a large system of covalent bonds, in which every atom ...

  6. Chemical compound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_compound

    Chemical compounds have a unique and defined chemical structure held together in a defined spatial arrangement by chemical bonds. Chemical compounds can be molecular compounds held together by covalent bonds, salts held together by ionic bonds, intermetallic compounds held together by metallic bonds, or the subset of chemical complexes that are ...

  7. Transition metal hydride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_metal_hydride

    The base strength of hydrides vary as much as the pK a of protons. This hydricity can be measured by heterolytic cleaving hydrogen between a metal complex and base with a known pK a then measuring the resulting equilibrium. This presupposes that the hydride doesn't heterolytically or homolytically react with itself to reform hydrogen.

  8. Bonding in solids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonding_in_solids

    Metallic solids are held together by a high density of shared, delocalized electrons, resulting in metallic bonding. Classic examples are metals such as copper and aluminum, but some materials are metals in an electronic sense but have negligible metallic bonding in a mechanical or thermodynamic sense (see intermediate forms).

  9. Molecular solid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_solid

    (b) Four acetic acid molecules in zig-zag hydrogen bonding in 1D. (c) Demonstration of how hydrogen bonding are involved in the crystal lattice structure. A hydrogen bond is a specific dipole where a hydrogen atom has a partial positive charge (δ+) to due a neighboring electronegative atom or functional group.