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Bond dissociation energy
Standard enthalpy change when a chemical bond is cleaved by homolysis
Standard enthalpy change when a chemical bond is cleaved by homolysis
The bond dissociation energy (BDE, **D0''', or ***DH°''''') is one measure of the strength of a chemical bond . It can be defined as the standard enthalpy change when is cleaved by homolysis to give fragments A and B, which are usually radical species. The enthalpy change is temperature-dependent, and the bond dissociation energy is often defined to be the enthalpy change of the homolysis at 0 K (absolute zero), although the enthalpy change at 298 K (standard conditions) is also a frequently encountered parameter.
As a typical example, the bond dissociation energy for one of the C−H bonds in ethane () is defined as the standard enthalpy change of the process : , : DH°298() = ΔH° = 101.1(4) kcal/mol = 423.0 ± 1.7 kJ/mol = 4.40(2) eV (per bond).
To convert a molar BDE to the energy needed to dissociate the bond per molecule, the conversion factor 23.060 kcal/mol (96.485 kJ/mol) for each eV can be used.
A variety of experimental techniques, including spectrometric determination of energy levels, generation of radicals by pyrolysis or photolysis, measurements of chemical kinetics and equilibrium, and various calorimetric and electrochemical methods have been used to measure bond dissociation energy values. Nevertheless, bond dissociation energy measurements are challenging and are subject to considerable error. The majority of currently known values are accurate to within ±1 or 2 kcal/mol (4–10 kJ/mol). Moreover, values measured in the past, especially before the 1970s, can be especially unreliable and have been subject to revisions on the order of 10 kcal/mol (e.g., benzene C–H bonds, from 103 kcal/mol in 1965 to the modern accepted value of 112.9(5) kcal/mol). Even in modern times (between 1990 and 2004), the O−H bond of phenol has been reported to be anywhere from 85.8 to 91.0 kcal/mol. On the other hand, the bond dissociation energy of H2 at 298 K has been measured to high precision and accuracy: DH°298(H−H) = 104.1539(1) kcal/mol or 435.780 kJ/mol.
Homolytic versus heterolytic dissociation
Bonds can be broken symmetrically or asymmetrically. The former is called homolysis and is the basis of the usual BDEs. Asymmetric scission of a bond is called heterolysis. For molecular hydrogen, the alternatives are: :{| style="border-spacing: 1em 0; margin-left: -1em" |- | Symmetric: | H2 → 2 H•
| ΔH° = 104.2 kcal/mol (see table below) |
|---|
| Asymmetric: |
| H2 → H+ + H− |
| ΔH° = 400.4 kcal/mol (gas phase) |
| - |
| Asymmetric: |
| H2 → H+ + H− |
| ΔG° = 34.2 kcal/mol (in water) (pKaaq = 25.1) |
| } |
In the gas phase, the enthalpy of heterolysis is larger than that of homolysis, due to the need to separate unlike charges. However, this value is lowered substantially in the presence of a solvent.
Representative bond enthalpies
The data tabulated below shows how bond strengths vary over the periodic table.
| Bond | Bond | Bond-dissociation enthalpy at 298 K | Comment | (kcal/mol) | (kJ/mol) | (eV/bond) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C−C | in typical alkane | 83–90 | 347–377 | 3.60–3.90 | Strong, but weaker than C−H bonds | |
| C−F | in CH3F | 115 | 481 | 4.99 | Very strong, rationalizes inertness of Teflon | |
| H−H | hydrogen | 103 | 431 | 4.52 | Strong, nonpolarizable bond | |
| H−F | hydrogen fluoride | 136 | 569 | 5.90 | Very strong | |
| O−H | in water | 119 | 497 | 5.15 | Very strong, hydroxyl radical reactive with almost all organics exothermically by H atom abstraction | |
| O−H | in methanol | 105 | 440 | 4.56 | Slightly stronger than C−H bonds | |
| O−H | in α-tocopherol (an antioxidant) | 77 | 323 | 3.35 | O−H bond strength depends strongly on substituent on O | |
| C−O | methanol | 92 | 385 | 3.99 | typical alcohol | |
| C≡O | carbon monoxide | 257 | 1077 | 11.16 | Strongest bond in neutral molecule | |
| O=CO | carbon dioxide | 127 | 532 | 5.51 | Slightly stronger than C−H bonds, surprisingly low due to stability of C≡O | |
| O=CH2 | formaldehyde | 179 | 748 | 7.75 | Much stronger than C−H bonds | |
| O=O | oxygen | 119 | 498 | 5.15 | Stronger than single bonds, weaker than many other double bonds | |
| N≡N | nitrogen | 226 | 945 | 9.79 | One of the strongest bonds, large activation energy in production of ammonia |
There is great interest, especially in organic chemistry, concerning relative strengths of bonds within a given group of compounds, and representative bond dissociation energies for common organic compounds are shown below.
| Bond | Bond | Bond-dissociation energy at 298 K | Comment | (kcal/mol) | (kJ/mol) | (eV/bond) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H3C−H | Methyl C−H bond | 105 | 439 | 4.550 | One of the strongest aliphatic C−H bonds | |
| C2H5−H | Ethyl C−H bond | 101 | 423 | 4.384 | Slightly weaker than H3C−H | |
| (CH3)2CH−H | Isopropyl C−H bond | 99 | 414 | 4.293 | Secondary radicals are stabilized | |
| (CH3)3C−H | t-Butyl C−H bond | 96.5 | 404 | 4.187 | Tertiary radicals are even more stabilized | |
| (CH3)2NCH2−H | C−H bond α to amine | 91 | 381 | 3.949 | Lone-pair bearing heteroatoms weaken C−H bonds | |
| (CH2)3OCH−H | C−H bond α to ether | 92 | 385 | 3.990 | Lone-pair bearing heteroatoms weaken C−H bonds. THF tends to form hydroperoxides | |
| CH3C(=O)CH2−H | C−H bond α to ketone | 96 | 402 | 4.163 | Conjugating electron-withdrawing groups weaken C−H bonds | |
| CH2CH−H | Vinyl C−H bond | 111 | 464 | 4.809 | Vinyl radicals are uncommon | |
| HCC−H | Acetylenic C−H bond | 133 | 556 | 5.763 | Acetylenic radicals are very rare | |
| C6H5−H | Phenyl C−H bond | 113 | 473 | 4.902 | Comparable to vinyl radical, uncommon | |
| CH2CHCH2−H | Allylic C−H bond | 89 | 372 | 3.856 | Such bonds show enhanced reactivity, see drying oil | |
| C6H5CH2−H | Benzylic C−H bond | 90 | 377 | 3.907 | Akin to allylic C−H bonds. Such bonds show enhanced reactivity | |
| H3C−CH3 | Alkane C−C bond | 83–90 | 347–377 | 3.60–3.90 | Much weaker than C−H bond. Homolytic cleavage occurs when H3C−CH3 thermolysed at 500 °C | |
| H2C=CH2 | Alkene C=C bond | ~170 | ~710 | ~7.4 | About 2 times stronger than a C−C single bond; however, the π bond (~65 kcal/mol) is weaker than the σ bond | |
| HC≡CH | Alkyne C≡C triple bond | ~230 | ~960 | ~10.0 | About 2.5 times stronger than a C−C single bond |
References
References
- "Bond-dissociation energy".
- The value reported as the bond dissociation energy (BDE) is generally the enthalpy of the homolytic dissociation of a ''gas-phase species''. For instance, the BDE of diiodine is calculated as twice the heat of formation of iodine radical (25.5 kcal/mol) minus the heat of formation of diiodine gas (14.9 kcal/mol). This gives the accepted BDE of diiodine of 36.1 kcal/mol. (By definition, diiodine in the solid state has a heat of formation of 0.)
- The IUPAC Gold Book does not stipulate a temperature for its definition of bond dissociation energy (ref. 1).
- The corresponding BDE at 0 K (''D''0) is 99.5(5) kcal/mol.
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