In biological terms, ionic bonds, hydrogen bonds and van der Waals interactions are considered weak bonds.
Ionic bonding in a cell is indeed very weak. Here's a statement from Karp's 2nd edition Cell
and Molecular Biology text (pp. 34-35):
Ionic bonds within a salt crystal
may be quite strong. However, if the
crystal of salt is dissolved in water, each of the individual ions becomes
surrounded by water molecules, which inhibit oppositely charged ions from
approaching one another closely enough to form ionic bonds. Since cells are composed primarily of water,
bonds between free ions are of little importance.
So, within an aqueous environment, the interaction between
ions of opposite charge is minimal and ionic bonds can be considered weak. To add a little perspective, consider Karp's
next statements:
In contrast, weak ionic bonds
between oppositely charged groups of large biological molecules are of
considerable importance. For example,
when negatively charged phosphate atoms in a DNA molecule are closely
associated with positively charged groups on the surface of a protein, ionic
bonds between them help hold the complex together. ...
The strength of ionic bonds in a cell is generally weak (about 3
kcal/mole) due to the presence of water, but deep within the core of a protein,
where water is often excluded, such bonds can be
influential."
In water, ionic bonds are very weak. (Your bio teacher didn’t
lie to you!) However, in an aprotic solvent or in an anhydrous environment, you have a
totally different situation. When using
LDA as a base, there is no water around. If you form an enolate anion, the O- will be closely
associated with the Li+ and will form a strong ionic bond. Ionic bonding in crystals will be even
stronger than in solution...but that’s a topic for an inorganic chemistry
class!
2 comments:
Agreed! Ionic bonds are much weaker than covalent bonds in an aqueous environment such as water.(Biological Sciences Ref Book) This is because there is an immediate attraction of polar solvent molecules (such as water) for ions in the ionic compound. Ion-solvent pairs are formed which releases sufficient energy to separate the oppositely charged ions from the lattice. (Chem ref. book) =)
thanks for the affirmation. :)
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