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Strange Forms of Bonding

Strange Forms of Bonding

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While we often imagine chemical bonds as rigid sticks connecting atoms, reality is a "fuzzy" glue that even modern AI is still learning to predict.

Linus Pauling’s classic 1931 taxonomy remains the foundation of chemistry.

However, 2025 breakthroughs at the European XFEL, which filmed atoms bonding in real-time, prove that these categories are actually parts of a shifting spectrum.

New research highlights "shades" of bonding, such as the metavalent bond, which sits between covalent and metallic states.

These electron-deficient links are the secret to high-tech materials like phase-change memory, allowing for rapid data storage by toggling between different atomic arrangements.

Even common substances like water can defy rules; in "supercritical" conditions of extreme heat and pressure, traditional hydrogen bonds break so fast they effectively vanish.

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