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Intermolecular Forces Chapter 4.7
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Page 1: 47 intermolecularforces

Intermolecular Forces

Chapter 4.7

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Intramolecular vs. Intermolecular

• An intramolecular bond is the chemical bond within a molecule

• An intermolecular force is a force that occurs betweenmolecules

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States of Matter

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3 Types of Intermolecular Forces

1. London Dispersion Force

2. Dipole-Dipole Force

3. Hydrogen Bonds

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London Dispersion Force

Attraction resulting from a random momentary non symmetrical electron distribution

You can also think of it as the negative electrons from one molecule being attracted to the positive nucleus of a adjacent molecule

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London Dispersion Force

• All molecules experience London Dispersion Forces, but they have the greatest impact in non-polar molecules

• London Dispersion Force is the weakest intermolecular force

• The strength of the London force increases with:– Increasing size

– Increasing surface area of contact or proximity

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Dipole-Dipole Force

• Only polar molecules experience Dipole-Dipole forces

• Dipole-Dipole forces are stronger than London Dispersion forces (but are still only 1% as strong as covalent or ionic bonds)

• The strength of the Dipole-Dipole force increases with:– Increasing polarity

– Decreased distance between molecules

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Hydrogen Bonds

• Only molecules that have O, N, or F attached to H experience hydrogen bonding

• Hydrogen bonds are the strongest type of intermolecular force (but they are still 10-20 times weaker than covalent bonds)

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Intermolecular Forces and Physical Properties

• The stronger the intermolecular forces are, the more energy it will require to pull the molecules apart

• Molecules that have strong intermolecular forces also have high melting points and boiling points

• Intermolecular forces can also affect solubility

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Intermolecular Forces and Physical Properties

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Intermolecular Forces and Physical Properties

explain the trend

explain the trend

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Intermolecular Forces and Physical Properties

explain the trend

explain the trend

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Intermolecular Forces and Physical Properties

trimethylamine, b.p. 3.5°C

N CH3H3C

CH3

propylamine, b.p. 49°C

CH3CH2CH2 N

H

H

ethylmethylamine, b.p. 37°C

N CH3CH3CH2

H

explain the trend

explain the trend

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Physical Properties of Liquids

• Surface Tension is the resistance of a liquid to increase its surface area

• The stronger the intermolecular forces, the greater the surface tensoin

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Physical Properties of Liquids

• Capillary action is the spontaneous rising of a liquid in a narrow tube due to adhesive and cohesive forces

Glass (SiO4)

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HOMEWORK

Required Reading:

p. 239-247(remember to supplement your notes!)

Questions:

p. 244 #1-2

p. 247 #1-8