intramolecular forces, which hold atoms together in
molecules. In the simplistic localized view of bonding, the number of electrons participating in a bond (or located in a bonding orbital) is typically multiples of two, four, or six, respectively. Even numbers are common because electrons enjoy lower energy states, if paired. Substantially more advanced bonding theories have shown that
bond strength is not always a whole number, depending on the distribution of electrons to each atom involved in a bond. For example, the carbons in
benzene are connected to each other with about 1.5 bonds, and the two atoms in
nitric oxide NO, are connected with about 2.5 bonds.
Quadruple bonds are also well known. The type of strong bond depends on the difference in
electronegativity and the distribution of the electron orbital paths available to the atoms that are bonded. The larger the difference in electronegativity, the more an electron is attracted to a particular atom involved in the bond, and the more "ionic" properties the bond is said to have ("ionic" means the bond electron(s) are unequally shared). The smaller the difference in electronegativity, the more covalent properties (full sharing) the bond has.
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