Free Electronegativity Calculator
Use this Free Electronegativity Calculator to work through the same calculation as the main calculator page with clear steps, examples, and result context.
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Run the calculator.
What This Free Electronegativity Calculator Helps You Do
This page gives the most practical electronegativity workflow: compare two values, compute the difference, and classify the likely bond polarity. That makes it useful for fast chemistry checks without forcing a full periodic-table lookup.
The interpretation also calls out borderline differences so you can treat the classification as a spectrum rather than a rigid yes-or-no label.
How to Calculate Free Electronegativity Calculator
- Enter the two electronegativities: Use Pauling values for the two atoms or groups you want to compare.
- Compute the absolute difference: The calculator subtracts the two values and uses the absolute value to find ΔEN.
- Classify the bond trend: The result maps the difference to a common chemistry rule-of-thumb for bond polarity.
- Use the result with judgment: Bond character is a spectrum, so the label is a practical approximation rather than a hard law.
Free Electronegativity Calculator Formula
| Variable | Meaning | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| χA | Electronegativity of atom A | Pauling scale |
| χB | Electronegativity of atom B | Pauling scale |
| ΔEN | Electronegativity difference | Pauling-scale difference |
Use the worked examples below to check how the formula behaves with real values. If the result looks unexpected, verify the unit assumptions and the meaning of each variable before interpreting the answer.
Worked Examples
- χA: 2.20
- χB: 2.20
Result: ΔEN is 0.00 and the bond is nonpolar covalent.
Identical electronegativities give no polarity difference.
- χA: 2.20
- χB: 3.16
Result: ΔEN is 0.96 and the bond is polar covalent.
The larger electronegativity on chlorine pulls electron density toward one side of the bond.
- χA: 0.93
- χB: 3.98
Result: ΔEN is 3.05 and the bond trend is ionic.
A very large electronegativity difference indicates strong electron transfer character.
- χA: 2.55
- χB: 2.20
Result: ΔEN is 0.35 and the bond is weakly nonpolar to slightly polar.
Small differences near the boundary should be interpreted with chemical context.
How to Interpret Your Results
| Range | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| ΔEN up to 0.4 | Nonpolar covalent trend. | Expect electron sharing to be fairly even. |
| ΔEN from 0.4 to 1.7 | Polar covalent trend. | Expect unequal sharing and a bond dipole. |
| ΔEN above 1.7 | Strong ionic trend. | Expect pronounced charge separation or electron-transfer character. |
Frequently Asked Questions
References
Last reviewed: March 2026