ElectrolysisDiagram

Types of Chemical Bonding

Part of Electrolysis of Molten CompoundsGCSE Chemistry

This diagram covers Types of Chemical Bonding within Electrolysis of Molten Compounds for GCSE Chemistry. Revise Electrolysis of Molten Compounds in Electrolysis for GCSE Chemistry with 20 exam-style questions and 0 flashcards. This is a high-frequency topic, so it is worth revising until the explanation feels precise and repeatable. It is section 3 of 13 in this topic. Focus on the labels, the relationships between parts, and the explanation that turns the diagram into an exam-ready answer.

Topic position

Section 3 of 13

Practice

20 questions

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⚡ Types of Chemical Bonding

Comparison of three bonding types: Ionic bonding (electron transfer between metal and non-metal forming oppositely charged ions), Covalent bonding (electron sharing between non-metals), and Metallic bonding (sea of delocalised electrons around positive metal ions). Includes properties comparison table for melting point, conductivity, and examples.

💡 Remember: Ionic = transfer, Covalent = share, Metallic = delocalise

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Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in Electrolysis of Molten Compounds. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for Electrolysis of Molten Compounds

Which condition is required for electrolysis to occur with an ionic compound?

  • A. The ions must be free to move (molten or in solution)
  • B. The compound must be dissolved in organic solvent
  • C. The compound must be heated above 1000 °C
  • D. The compound must contain metallic bonds
1 markfoundation

State the products formed at each electrode when molten lead bromide (PbBr₂) is electrolysed.

2 marksstandard

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