6

The atomic number of Na is 11 (2, 8, 1). Na loses an electron to achieve octet stability but why can't it just accept an electron to complete duplet stability?

2 Answers2

8

Well, sodium does have non-zero electron affinity, so it surely can acquire another electron, provided it can get one for free. That's what happens when a lone sodium atom meets a lone electron somewhere in deep space. But here on Earth, with all that condensed matter around, we don't have many free electrons (*). They all belong to some other atoms, and if you want to get an electron (that is, to get reduced), you have to oxidize something else.


(*) Then again, some might recall metals in which the electrons are kinda free, but wait: they are not really free. They are bound by the collective field of metal cations, and you need to apply certain energy to take one out.


It turns out that $\ce{Na}$ and other alkali metals can actually be reduced to form alkalides, but those are exotic compounds. They are not particularly stable, and get oxidized with pretty much anything. It is much easier for $\ce{Na}$ to form a cation, thus achieving the stable octet, and call it a day.

There is a whole different dimension to the problem: why wouldn't two sodium atoms share their electrons, establish a bond, and form a diatomic molecule? Again, they would, but only in a vacuum! When you have many such molecules, the sodium atoms would share their other empty orbitals, find out they don't have enough electrons to fill them all, and just resort to being a metal.

Ivan Neretin
  • 31,167
  • 3
  • 72
  • 119
2

Sodium not only forms species with two electrons in the $3s$ subshell ($\ce{Na^-,Na2}$). It is also known to form a dimer of the $\ce{Na^-}$ion, even though the individual atoms therein possess closed-shell electronic structures and would not be expected to form a covalent bonds to offset the repulsion between the negative charges.

The dimeric $\ce{Na_2^{2-}}$ anion occurs in barium azacryptand sodide [1]. The crystal structure, pictured as shown below from [1], features the large, blue atoms which are the paired sodium atoms in this dianion (red atoms are barium, the small green atoms are from the cryptand). The large atomic size, corresponding to a highly diffuse electron cloud, reduces the like-charge repulsion while improving polarizability for a VdW attraction.

enter image description here

Reference

1. Mikhail Y. Redko, Rui H. Huang, James E. Jackson, James F. Harrison, and James L. Dye, "Barium Azacryptand Sodide, the First Alkalide with an Alkaline Earth Cation, Also Contains a Novel Dimer, (Na2)2-", J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2003, 125, 8, 2259–2263. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja027241m

Oscar Lanzi
  • 56,895
  • 4
  • 89
  • 175