I'm trying to get my head around how a compound like ammonium fluoride can exist when ammonia and hydrofluoric acid are combined - I think I have it but want to run it by someone to verify it.
As I understand it a coordinate covalnet bond exists when a lewis Acid, in this case the hydrofluoric acid, accepts a pair of electrons from a lewis base (the ammonia) so the hydrogen in the HF is protonated and can therefore attach to nitrogen's lone pair of electrons in ammonia forming NH
4+ with a cooridnate covalent bond leaving the fluorine with 8 valence electrons instead of 7 (F
-). Because it is an aqueous solution the NH
4F forms NH
4+ ions and F
- ions (or is is F
2-), and in the solid state it arranges into a crystal lattice with alternatively arranged +ve and -ve ions as per the classic NaCl model.
Now this is where my confusion arises... I can draw a lewis diagram for NaCl because the electrons can get shared out normally allowing both atoms to achieve noble gas configuration but I can't work out how to draw a lewis diagram for NH
4F because there doesn't seem to be anywhere for the fluroine to attach - especially as it already seems to have achieved nobel gas configuration by itself?
Or is it purely a polar attraction? I have searched the net for help on this with very little luck and my old chem texts don't provide much assistance. I can draw the cooridinate covalently bonded hydrogen in the ammonium ion but that's where I get stuck. If anyone can explain this I'd be very grateful - I've been trying to work it out all day