Bond Dissociation Energy Calculator

Analyze bond strength using enthalpy, stoichiometry, radicals, and moles. Compare per bond and total energy. Plot outcomes instantly and save clean tables offline today.

Enter bond dissociation data

Use fragment and parent enthalpy values in kJ/mol. The correction field lets you apply an optional adjustment.

Name the bond or reaction pair.
Reference enthalpy of the intact molecule.
Enter the first radical or fragment enthalpy.
Enter the second radical or fragment enthalpy.
Optional correction for adjusted thermodynamic estimates.
Use 1 for O2, H2, or Cl2.
Total number of moles to break.
Reset Form

Plotly graph

The chart below shows how total breakup energy changes with sample size for the current bond energy.

Formula used

Primary bond dissociation relation

BDE = H(fragments) - H(parent molecule)

Expanded form:

BDE = Fragment A + Fragment B + Correction - Parent

Total breakup energy

Total Energy = BDE × Bonds per Molecule × Moles

This turns the per mole bond energy into the total energy required for the selected amount.

Bond dissociation energy is usually reported in kJ/mol. The calculator also converts the result into kcal/mol, eV per bond, and total kWh.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter a bond label so the result table is easy to identify later.
  2. Type the intact molecule enthalpy and both fragment enthalpy values.
  3. Add a correction only when your method requires one.
  4. Enter bonds per molecule and the number of moles you want to analyze.
  5. Press the calculate button to show the result above the form.
  6. Review the summary metrics, graph, and result table.
  7. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the output.

Example data table

These values are approximate examples for quick testing and comparison.

Bond Approximate BDE Unit Typical Note
H-H 436 kJ/mol Common single bond benchmark.
Cl-Cl 243 kJ/mol Weaker than many covalent single bonds.
O=O 498 kJ/mol One double bond per O2 molecule.
C-H 413 kJ/mol Important in hydrocarbon stability.
N≡N 945 kJ/mol Very strong triple bond example.

Frequently asked questions

1. What is bond dissociation energy and how does it affect carbon compounds?

Bond dissociation energy is the energy needed to break a bond homolytically. In carbon compounds, higher values usually mean stronger, less reactive bonds, while lower values often support easier radical formation, oxidation, substitution, or thermal cracking.

2. What is the bond dissociation energy for breaking all the bonds in a mole of O2 molecules?

One mole of O2 contains one mole of O=O bonds. Using a common approximate value, breaking all of them needs about 498 kJ for that mole of molecules.

3. What is bond dissociation energy?

It is the enthalpy required to break one mole of a specific covalent bond in the gas phase, usually by homolytic cleavage, producing radicals.

4. Why do values differ between textbooks and databases?

Sources may use different temperatures, molecular states, computational methods, or averaged values. Some tables list specific gas-phase bond energies, while others report mean bond enthalpies across related compounds.

5. Is bond dissociation energy the same as activation energy?

No. Bond dissociation energy is a thermodynamic quantity for bond breaking. Activation energy is the energy barrier for a reaction path and can be higher or lower depending on mechanism.

6. What units are commonly used?

The most common unit is kJ/mol. Many chemistry references also use kcal/mol, and atomic-scale discussions may use electronvolts per bond.

7. Why is the C-H bond important in fuel and polymer studies?

C-H bond strength influences combustion, pyrolysis, radical stability, and degradation rates. It helps predict how easily hydrocarbons start chain reactions under heat, light, or catalytic conditions.

8. Can this calculator estimate total energy for many molecules?

Yes. Enter the per bond enthalpy inputs, then set bonds per molecule and moles. The calculator multiplies them to estimate total breakup energy for the chosen sample size.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.