Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Intermolecular Forces H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H (given in increasing strength)

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Intermolecular Forces H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H (given in increasing strength)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Intermolecular Forces H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H (given in increasing strength)

2 Explain the types of intermolecular forces possible. Include: Dispersion, Dipole, Hydrogen-bonding Compare and contrast polar, non-polar, and ionic bonding in terms of IMFs Include: examples of each bonding type. Additional KEY Terms Dipole

3 1. London dispersion force (Weakest) Occurs between NON-POLAR molecules. Atoms of a NP molecule equally share bonding e -. normally no overall charge. (O 2, Cl 2, CH 4, C 2 H 8 ) HCHHH

4 At any given time, e - in a molecule are unevenly distributed – e - move. Causes temporary dipoles (charged regions) to form, which leads to attraction between molecules. HCHHH δ+δ+ δ-δ-

5 ++++ FFFF F2F2 F2F2 δ+δ+ δ-δ- non - polar molecules

6 HCH CH 4 δ+δ+ δ-δ- non - polar molecules HHCHHHH temporary dipole

7 2. Dipole-Dipole One atom of a molecule pulls the shared electrons closer than the other (unequal sharing). Cl δ+δ+ δ-δ- Causes permanent negative and positive dipoles. The polar ends attract other polar molecules. H

8 Cl H H polar molecules δ+δ+ δ-δ- δ-δ- δ+δ+ permanent dipole δ+δ+ δ-δ-

9 3.Hydrogen bond (special dipole-dipole force) Very strong force. Any substance containing hydrogen bonded directly to O, N, or F. O, N and F pull extremely hard on the bonding electrons (VERY unequal sharing) - large dipoles.

10 H O H H O H H O H N H H H H N H H H H N H H H H polar molecules δ+δ+ δ-δ- δ+δ+ δ+δ+ δ-δ- δ+δ+ δ+δ+ δ-δ- δ+δ+

11 4. Strong ionic attraction Positive and negatively charged IONS held together by electrostatic (attraction) forces. These electrostatic forces are extremely strong, giving ionic compounds very large melting and boiling points.

12 Electrostatic Attraction Permanent - strongest MgBr 2 or Ca(NO 3 ) 2 Dispersion Forces Temporary - weak CH 4 or Cl 2 Dipole or H-bonds Permanent HCl or H 2 O

13 The Special Case for Water

14

15

16 Hydrogen-bonding holds water molecules together strongly. Responsible for the higher than expected melting point and boiling point.

17 Because of H - bonding, ice forms unique crystal shape (six-sided), having an area greater than that liquid water. Ice is less dense than water...most solids are more dense than their respective liquids.

18 CAN YOU / HAVE YOU? Explain the types of intermolecular forces possible. Include: Dispersion, Dipole, Hydrogen-bonding Compare and contrast polar, non-polar, and ionic bonding in terms of IMFs Include: examples of each. Additional KEY Terms Dipole


Download ppt "Intermolecular Forces H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H (given in increasing strength)"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google