A new type of chemical bond: The charge-shift bond

is an associate professor of chemistry at Marist College who studies chemical bonding, which is the process that holds atoms together to make molecules.
What have you discovered?
Did you take a chemistry course in high school? Did you think it was a boring static field filled with established facts that were determined a long time ago? I've done research that shows that the most fundamental of these established "facts," the nature of the chemical bond, is now being questioned.
You have likely heard of covalent bonds, where electrons are shared between atoms, and ionic bonds, where electrons are completely transferred from one atom to another. But you probably don't know about a third type of bond, discovered in the early 1990s by and : . I began working with them soon after.
What makes a charge-shift bond different?
In charge-shift bonds, electrons are both shared and transferred at the same time.
That might sound a little crazy, but think of it like this: You know those movable walkways at airports? Suppose that for over 100 years, people thought that the only way to get from one point to another was to either stand on the moving walkway or walk alongside it.
and a handful of others around the world, show that charge-shift bonding is a broad phenomenon that happens between a variety of elements from across the periodic table.
What inspired this discovery?
Shaik and Hiberty were calculating the energy required to break a series of bonds using a method called valence bond theory. Chemistry is all about pattern recognition, and all of the bonds they studied fit a well-established pattern, except the bond between two fluorine atoms. Traditionally thought of as a purely covalent bond, this molecule didn't behave like any other covalent bond. By trying to understand why, Shaik and Hiberty uncovered something completely unique.
This is the first major change in the way chemists think about bonding in more than 100 years. Chemical bonding is at the heart of chemistry, so changing the way chemists think about bonding will change the entire field.
How are charge-shift bonds applied in the real world?
Synthetic such as , , , and come from making and breaking chemical bonds.
Therefore, insight into chemical bonding can inspire new materials with properties we have yet to imagine. We are already seeing chemists exploit the properties of charge-shift bonds to speed up chemical reactions and to understand the properties of industrial solvents.
What is the coolest element of your new research?
Chemistry is alive and constantly changing—that's what first attracted me to the field. Charge-shift bonding challenges something so fundamental to the field that it is largely taken for granted.

The drama of sweeping theory change is in full effect here: The concept was introduced many years ago but not rapidly accepted; over time, diligent work by a handful of believers provided more support for the idea; and now it is gaining due to verification through alternative and means.
I also find it fascinating that most chemical processes can now be reliably modeled on a computer. I always liked chemistry for the knowledge it provided about how things work on the atomic scale. However, I never felt comfortable playing with beakers and hazardous chemicals. While chemistry is still a predominantly experimental science, today computers can direct those experiments while also providing a place for an experimentally challenged chemist such as myself.
Provided by The Conversation
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