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I was wondering if there was any way of representing a dative/coordinate covalent bond on a chemical diagram.

A single bond can easily be represented as a single line, a double bond as a double line and a triple bond as a triple line.

Take the below structure of ethene, a compound with single and double non-coordinate covalent bonds: each bond is easily represented by a single and double line.

However, the ammonium ion does have a coordinate bond between the lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen and the H+ ion from whichever compound donated it (e.g. hydrochloric acid). Despite this, I am unable to see how a coordinate bond could be represented, as, to me, it just looks like 4 non-dative covalent bonds.

Is there any way of representing a coordinate/dative covalent bond on diagrams like these?

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  • $\begingroup$ I have usually seen a coordinate bond represented by an arrow. The arrow points from the atom donating the lone pair to the atom accepting it $\endgroup$
    – getafix
    Jun 7, 2015 at 10:27
  • $\begingroup$ I suggest doing a Google image search on "dative bonding" $\endgroup$
    – Jan Jensen
    Jun 7, 2015 at 10:32

2 Answers 2

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Generally, you wouldn't describe the bonds in an ammonium ion as dative bonds. They are usually considered to be proper covalent bonds. The term "dative bond" is typically used for bonds in (transition) metal complexes between ligands and a metal center. But for those complexes Lewis structures have lots of weaknesses and are rarely a good representation of the actual bonding. Yet they are used for the sake of convenience. Often an arrow from the ligand to the metal center is used to indicate a dative bond.


(source: uni-erlangen.de)

But just as often you see normal "covalent bonds" (straight lines) like in traditional Lewis structures being used. Often both kinds of representations are even intermixed.

For a more detailed view on the subject of bonding in coordination complexes and its representation have a look at this answer of mine.

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According to the Graphical Representation Standards for Chemical Structure Diagrams (IUPAC Recommendations 2008), an ion may be best represented by its molecular formula when exact connectivity is not important. The formula should be placed in square brackets, and the charge should be written as a superscript following the rightmost bracket.

$$\ce{[CuCl4]^2-}$$

If it is important to depict atoms and bonds explicitly, the ion should be drawn in full. That structure should be enclosed in large square brackets, and the charge should be reported as a superscript following the rightmost bracket. (For single fragments, it is permissible to depict simply a corner at the top right of the diagram, with the charge as a superscript following the corner.)

Bonds representing coordination from one atom to a single other atom should be represented as normal plain single bonds.

preferred

The use of dashed bonds or dative bonds to represent coordination is not acceptable.

not acceptable

Plain bonds should be used for nonstereogenic atoms, even if the substituents are not physically coplanar. If a coordination bond is attached to an atom that does have a specified stereochemical configuration, then a hashed or wedged bond depiction should be used instead.

The structure should be drawn without concern for delocalized charges. Other structural depictions that involve localized charges should be avoided, even if that produces a diagram where some atoms appear to have non-standard valences. It is not acceptable to add charges that depict formal zwitterions.

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