Ch3 Chemical Bonding Easy Notes Electronegativity Class 11 FBISE

Are you a Class 11 FBISE student struggling with Chapter 3 Chemical Bonding Easy Notes: Electronegativity Trends (NBF) under the new National Book Foundation (NBF) curriculum? You’re not alone! Electronegativity trends are the foundation of understanding bond types, polarity, and molecular behavior. This solved notes guide breaks down every concept with crystal-clear explanations, solved exercises, trends, examples, and memory tricks — all aligned with FBISE new course, NBF, and Cantab standards.

Download the full PDF now for easy notes, complete solutions, diagrams, tables, and VSEPR predictions to ace your exams!


What is Electronegativity? (Solved Definition & Pauling Scale)

Electronegativity is defined as an atom’s ability to attract shared electrons in a chemical bond. It’s measured on the Pauling scale, where:

  • Fluorine (F) = 4.0Highest electronegativity
  • Francium (Fr) = 0.7Lowest electronegativity

Solved Example: Why is F the most electronegative?
Ans: Smallest atomic size + highest effective nuclear charge → strongest pull on bonding electrons.

Focus Keyword: Chapter 3 Chemical Bonding Easy Notes: Electronegativity Trends (NBF)


Electronegativity Trends in Periodic Table – Down the Group & Across the Period (Solved)

DirectionElectronegativity TrendReason (Solved)
Down a Group (Top → Bottom)DecreasesMore electron shells → weaker nuclear pull on bonding electrons
Across a Period (Left → Right)IncreasesMore protons + smaller atomic sizestronger pull on electrons

Solved Trend Examples:

  • Down Group 17: F > Cl > Br > I → Electronegativity decreases
  • Across Period 3: Na < Mg < Al < Si < P < S < Cl → Electronegativity increases

Memory Trick:

  • Groups: “Bigger atoms = Greedy but weak” (size wins)
  • Periods: “Smaller and stronger” (tight pull)

Nature of Chemical Bonds Based on Electronegativity Difference (ΔEN) – Fully Solved

ΔENBond TypeExampleExplanation
0Pure CovalentO₂, Cl₂Equal sharing
0.4 – 1.8Polar CovalentHCl (ΔEN = 0.96)Unequal sharing → partial charges
> 1.8IonicKCl (ΔEN = 2.34)Electron transfer

Solved Exercise 3.1 (From PDF – Concept Assessment)

MoleculeΔENPolarityReason (Solved)
Cl₂3.0 – 3.0 = 0Non-polarSame atoms, symmetrical
HF4.0 – 2.1 = 1.9PolarLarge ΔEN, linear
SCl₂3.0 – 2.5 = 0.5PolarBent shape, dipoles don’t cancel
CHCl₃3.0 – 2.5 = 0.5PolarTetrahedral but asymmetrical
CBr₄2.8 – 2.5 = 0.3Non-polarSymmetrical tetrahedral

Download PDF for full solved table + diagrams!


Covalent Character in Ionic Compounds – Trend & Solved Example

  • Higher oxidation state of cationMore covalent character
  • Reason: Smaller, highly charged cation polarizes anion more → electron cloud distortion

Solved Example:

AlCl₃ (+3) is more covalent than MgCl₂ (+2)
Why? Al³⁺ is smaller and has higher charge → stronger polarizing power

Trend: Left → Right in period → Covalent character increases


Why Electronegativity Trends Matter? (Real-Life Applications)

  • High ΔENIonic bond → High melting point (e.g., NaCl)
  • Moderate ΔENPolar molecules → Soluble in water (e.g., HCl, HF)
  • Low ΔENNon-polar → Insoluble in water (e.g., oils)

One-Line Summary for Quick Revision

Down the group: Electronegativity decreases (bigger atoms)
Across the period: Electronegativity increases (stronger pull)


Why Download This PDF? (Benefits for Class 11 FBISE Students)

This Chapter 3 Chemical Bonding Easy Notes: Electronegativity Trends (NBF) PDF includes:

Solved Concept Assessment Exercise 3.1
Electronegativity trends with reasons & examples
Bond type classification table (0, 0.4–1.8, >1.8)
Polarity of molecules (Cl₂, HF, SCl₂, CHCl₃, CBr₄)
Memory tricks, tables, diagrams
Aligned with FBISE, NBF, Cantab new syllabus
Perfect for board exams, entry tests, and quick revision


Download Now & Master Electronegativity Trends!

🔥 Don’t just read — understand, solve, and score 90+ in Chemistry!
📥 Download Chapter 3 Chemical Bonding Easy Notes: Electronegativity Trends (NBF) – Solved PDF

Available in high-quality, printable format with Cantab-style formatting.


Keywords (SEO):
Class 11 Chemistry Notes, Chapter 3 Chemical Bonding, Electronegativity Trends NBF, FBISE Solved Notes, New Course Cantab, Easy Notes PDF, Bond Types Polarity, VSEPR Solved, Pauling Scale, FBISE Chemistry 2025

Leave a Comment