An ionic bond forms between:
Ionic bonds form when a metal transfers electrons to a nonmetal, creating oppositely charged ions that attract each other electrostatically.
Master Chemical Bonding with our comprehensive collection of MDCAT Chemistry MCQs. Each question is designed to test your understanding of key concepts including Ionic Bonding, Covalent Bonding, Metallic Bonding, VSEPR Theory. Whether you're preparing for MDCAT 2026 or revising for your board exams, these chapter-wise MCQs with detailed explanations will help you score higher.
We have carefully curated MCQs from Chapter 3 (Chemical Bonding) following the official MDCAT 2026 syllabus. Each question comes with the correct answer and detailed explanation.
Practice Chemistry MCQs Now Take Full MDCAT Mock TestBelow are important MCQs from MDCAT Chemistry Chapter 3 (Chemical Bonding). Each question includes the correct answer highlighted in green and a detailed explanation to help you understand the concept.
Ionic bonds form when a metal transfers electrons to a nonmetal, creating oppositely charged ions that attract each other electrostatically.
Covalent bonds form when atoms share electron pairs to achieve stable electron configurations. Common between nonmetal atoms.
CH4 has 4 bonding pairs around carbon with no lone pairs, giving a tetrahedral geometry with 109.5 degree bond angles (sp3 hybridization).
Electronegativity increases left to right across a period (more protons attracting shared electrons) and decreases down a group (electrons farther from nucleus).
Hydrogen bonds form when H is bonded to highly electronegative atoms (F, O, N). In water, H bonded to O creates strong hydrogen bonds between molecules.
sp2 hybridization involves mixing one s and two p orbitals, producing 3 hybrid orbitals arranged in a trigonal planar geometry with 120 degree angles.
Water has the highest boiling point due to extensive hydrogen bonding network. Each water molecule can form up to 4 hydrogen bonds.
In a coordinate (dative) covalent bond, one atom provides both shared electrons. Example: NH4+ where N donates a lone pair to H+.
Pi bonds form from the lateral (sideways) overlap of unhybridized p orbitals. They are weaker than sigma bonds and found in double/triple bonds.
In metallic bonding, valence electrons are delocalized and shared among all metal atoms, forming an "electron sea" that gives metals their conductivity and malleability.
Our full question bank has 100+ MCQs for this chapter alone. Practice in quiz mode with instant scoring, timer, and detailed performance analytics.
Start Full Quiz ModeChemical Bonding is a fundamental chapter in MDCAT Chemistry. This chapter covers the following important topics that frequently appear in the MDCAT exam:
By practicing these MCQs, you will develop a strong understanding of Chemical Bonding concepts and be well-prepared for the MDCAT 2026 exam.
Follow these expert tips to master Chemical Bonding and score maximum marks in MDCAT:
Based on analysis of past MDCAT papers, these topics from Chapter 3 (Chemical Bonding) are most frequently tested:
This Chemistry chapter is also tested in other Pakistani entry tests. Practice the same topics with exam-specific focus:
In MDCAT, Chemistry typically has 210 total MCQs. Chapter 3 (Chemical Bonding) usually contributes 3-5 MCQs in the actual exam. On Apna MCQs, we provide 10+ practice MCQs with detailed explanations for thorough preparation.
Yes! All MCQs on Apna MCQs are updated according to the latest Pakistan Medical Commission (PMC) MDCAT 2026 syllabus. Our team of expert educators regularly reviews and adds new questions based on the latest exam patterns and past papers.
Our Chemical Bonding MCQs cover all important topics including Ionic Bonding, Covalent Bonding, Metallic Bonding and more. Each topic has multiple MCQs ranging from easy to hard difficulty to ensure comprehensive preparation.
To prepare Chemical Bonding for MDCAT: 1) Read the textbook thoroughly, 2) Make notes of key concepts, 3) Practice MCQs on Apna MCQs with explanations, 4) Take mock tests, 5) Review weak areas. Our chapter-wise approach ensures you cover all 21 chapters systematically.
After completing Chapter 3, move to the next chapter on Apna MCQs. We cover all 21 chapters of Chemistry with chapter-wise MCQs. You can also take full-length MDCAT mock tests for timed practice.
Our MCQs include questions modeled on MDCAT past papers as well as original questions created by subject experts. The questions cover all topics in Chemical Bonding that are part of the official MDCAT syllabus.
Absolutely! While these MCQs are organized for MDCAT preparation, the content covers the same Chemistry Chapter 3 (Chemical Bonding) topics tested in FSc/Inter board exams. Many students use Apna MCQs for both board and entry test preparation.
Yes! Apna MCQs provides free access to chapter-wise MCQs for MDCAT, ECAT, LAT, IBA, Nursing and other entry tests. We believe quality education should be accessible to every student in Pakistan.