Electrovalent vs. Covalent Bond: Key Differences Explained
Electrovalent bonds form when one atom transfers electrons to another, creating ions that stick together by charge. Covalent bonds form when atoms share electron pairs instead of swapping them.
Students mix them up because both involve electrons and the word “valent,” so the labels feel interchangeable. In reality, salt on your fries is electrovalent, while the oxygen you breathe is covalent—different recipes for holding atoms together.
Key Differences
Electrovalent: metal + non-metal, electrons move, high melting points, conduct electricity in water. Covalent: non-metal + non-metal, electrons share, lower melting points, don’t conduct.
Which One Should You Choose?
You don’t pick; nature does. If you’re cooking, you’ll handle both: salt (electrovalent) seasons, while sugar (covalent) sweetens. Chemists just label the forces already at play.
Examples and Daily Life
Table salt (NaCl) shows electrovalent force; water (H₂O) and plastic bottles reveal covalent links. Your phone battery relies on both: lithium ions (electrovalent) shuttle through a covalent graphite lattice.
Do metals ever form covalent bonds?
Yes, in metal-metal “metallic” bonds electrons are shared like covalent clouds, but those bonds remain distinct from classic covalent sharing between non-metals.
Why does NaCl conduct electricity when dissolved?
The electrovalent bond splits into Na⁺ and Cl⁻ ions in water, letting charge flow like tiny swimmers in a pool.
Can a single molecule have both bond types?
Absolutely. Ammonium chloride (NH₄Cl) hosts covalent N–H bonds inside NH₄⁺ and an electrovalent link between NH₄⁺ and Cl⁻.