Hey everyone,
So I am slightly confused now, because my teacher has taught me one method, and many internet sites (including Dept. of Chem at many universities) seem to agree with the second method. Please tell me which one is correct, thanks in advance
Method 1: My teachers'
- Find the type of bond that exists. If the molecule only has NONPOLAR bonds ( EN < 0.4), the molecule is NONPOLAR regardless of its geometry. According to this, O3, H2S are nonpolar, beecause EN difference is less than 0.4 between O=O (pure covalent) and H-S (nonpolar bond), even though both have bent shape.
Method 2: The rest of the internet
- If a molecule has a polar shape/geometry, then the molecule is polar regardless of having non polar bonds. According to this, O3, H2S are polar molecules because they have bent shape, even though their bonds are non polar.
So which one is the correct one? I checked, O3 and H2S do have a non-zero dipole moment, but does that make it polar? WHERE DO WE DRAW THE LINE between polar and non polar? Is there a definite boundary?
Help is much appreciated,
Lilly