In chemistry, a double bond is a covalent bond between two involving four bonding electrons as opposed to two in a single bond. Double bonds occur most commonly between two carbon atoms, for example in . Many double bonds exist between two different elements: for example, in a carbonyl group between a carbon atom and an oxygen atom. Other common double bonds are found in (N=N), (C=N), and (S=O). In a skeletal formula, a double bond is drawn as two parallel lines (=) between the two connected atoms; typographically, the equals sign is used for this.
Double bonds were introduced in chemical notation by
chemist Alexander Butlerov.
Double bonds involving carbon are stronger and shorter than covalent bond. The bond order is two. Double bonds are also electron-rich, which makes them potentially more reactive in the presence of a strong electron acceptor (as in addition reactions of the halogens).
File:Ethene structural.svg|Ethylene double bond
File:Leuckart-Wallach-Reaktion Aceton.svg|Acetone double bond
File:Dimethylsulfoxid.svg|Dimethyl sulfoxide double bond
File:Trans-diazene-2D.svg|Diazene double bond
Double bonds in alkenes
The type of bonding can be explained in terms of orbital hybridisation. In
ethylene each carbon atom has three sp
2 orbitals and one
Atomic orbital. The three sp
2 orbitals lie in a plane with ~120° angles. The p-orbital is perpendicular to this plane. When the carbon atoms approach each other, two of the sp
2 orbitals overlap to form a
sigma bond. At the same time, the two p-orbitals approach (again in the same plane) and together they form a
pi bond. For maximum overlap, the p-orbitals have to remain parallel, and, therefore, rotation around the central bond is not possible. This property gives rise to cis-trans isomerism. Double bonds are shorter than single bonds because p-orbital overlap is maximized.
Image:Doppelbindung1.png|2 sp2 orbitals (total of 3 such orbitals) approach to form a sp2-sp2 sigma bond
Image:Doppelbindung2.png|Two p-orbitals overlap to form a pi-bond in a plane parallel to the sigma plane
Image:Ethylene 3D.png|Pi bond (green) in ethylene
With 133 pm, the ethylene C=C bond length is shorter than the C−C length in ethane with 154 pm. The double bond is also stronger, 636 Joule mol−1 versus 368 kJ mol−1 but not twice as much as the pi-bond is weaker than the sigma bond due to less effective pi-overlap.
In an alternative representation, the double bond results from two overlapping sp3 orbitals as in a bent bond.
Variations
In molecules with alternating double bonds and single bonds, p-orbital overlap can exist over multiple atoms in a chain, giving rise to a conjugated system. Conjugation can be found in systems such as
and enones. In
Cyclic compound, conjugation can lead to
aromaticity. In
, two double bonds are adjacent and do not overlap with each other.
Double bonds are common for period 2 elements carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, and less common with elements of higher periods, a distinction called the double bond rule. Metals, too, can engage in multiple bonding in a metal–ligand multiple bond.
Group 14 alkene homologues
Double bonded compounds,
alkene homologues, R
2E=ER
2 are now known for all of the heavier
carbon group elements. Unlike the alkenes these compounds are not planar but adopt twisted and/or
Trans isomer bent structures. These effects become more pronounced for the heavier elements. The
distannene (Me
3Si)
2CHSn=SnCH(SiMe
3)
2 has a tin-tin bond length just a little shorter than a single bond, a trans bent structure with pyramidal coordination at each
tin atom, and readily dissociates in solution to form (Me
3Si)
2CHSn: (stannanediyl, a carbene analog). The bonding comprises two weak donor acceptor bonds, the lone pair on each tin atom overlapping with the empty p orbital on the other.
In contrast, in
Disilene each silicon atom has planar coordination but the substituents are twisted so that the molecule as a whole is not planar. In diplumbenes the Pb=Pb bond length can be longer than that of many corresponding single bonds
[ Plumbenes and stannenes generally dissociate in solution into monomers with bond enthalpies that are just a fraction of the corresponding single bonds. Some double bonds plumbenes and stannenes are similar in strength to hydrogen bonds.][ The Carter–Goddard–Malrieu–Trinquier model can be used to predict the nature of the bonding.][
]
Types of double bonds between atoms