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CHAPTER 8 Compounds and Molecules 8.3 Intermolecular Forces
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2 We have seen in Chapter 3 that molecules in solids and liquids are held together by intermolecular forces What are these forces? Where do they come from? Do all molecules feel them?
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3 8.3 Intermolecular Forces A tiny drop of water Intermolecular attraction As a liquid, water molecules can move around but intermolecular forces keep them from separating completely to become a gas. A quick look at water
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4 8.3 Intermolecular Forces strong London dispersionDipole-dipoleHydrogen bonding Types of intermolecular attractions Between polar molecules Between nonpolar molecules Intermolecular attractions weak Intermolecular attractions are also called van der Waals attractions
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5 8.3 Intermolecular Forces strong London dispersionDipole-dipoleHydrogen bonding Types of intermolecular attractions Between polar molecules Between nonpolar molecules Intermolecular attractions are also called van der Waals attractions Intermolecular attractions weak
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6 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Dipole-dipole attractions Like water, formaldehyde is a polar molecule The polar covalent C=O bond makes the entire molecule polar We say the molecule has a dipole dipole-dipole attraction: the attractions between the positive part of one polar molecule and the negative part of another polar molecule.
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7 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Dipole-dipole attractions Like water, formaldehyde is a polar molecule Dipole-dipole attractions Dipole-dipole attractions cause formaldehyde to condense into a liquid at room temperature
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8 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Dipole-dipole attractions more less Dipole-dipole attractions Molecules that are more polar will attract strongly.
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9 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Dipole-dipole attractions more less Dipole-dipole attractions Molecules that are more polar will attract strongly.
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10 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Boiling point Dipole-dipole attractions Molecules that are more polar will attract strongly. more less Molecules that attract more strongly will have a boiling point. higher lower
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11 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Boiling point Dipole-dipole attractions Molecules that attract more strongly will have a boiling point. higher lower Molecules that are more polar will attract strongly. more less
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12 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Dipole-dipole attractions Higher polarity molecules attract more strongly and have a higher boiling point propane1-propanol1,3-propanediol least polar most polar –42 o C97 o C214 o C Boiling points
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13 8.3 Intermolecular Forces strong London dispersionDipole-dipoleHydrogen bonding Types of intermolecular attractions Between polar molecules Between nonpolar molecules Intermolecular attractions are also called van der Waals attractions Intermolecular attractions weak
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14 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Electronegativity There is a moderate difference in electronegativity between H and F, O and N (0.94 to 1.88)
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15 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Water molecules are held together by a network of hydrogen bonding
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16 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Iceberg photo courtesy of NOAA One special property of water: Ice is less dense than water in the liquid form There is more space in between water molecules in ice Water in the liquid form
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17 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding surface tension: a force acting to pull a liquid surface into the smallest possible area. Why a drop of water doesn’t “lie flat” on a hard surface: In reality water molecules are much, much smaller than on the drawing! H-bonds keep the water molecules together
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18 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Surface tension from hydrogen bonds allows a water strider to “walk” on water
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19 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding DNA uses hydrogen bonds to hold the two strands together Hydrogen bonds Hydrogen bonding plays a crucial role in DNA and protein structures
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20 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Hydrogen bonding plays a crucial role in DNA and protein structures The protein structure is stabilized with H bonds
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21 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Paper glue is a mixture of polyvinyl acetate (PVA) and water In “wet” glue, polymer molecules are lubricated by water
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22 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Hydrogen bonding Paper glue is a mixture of polyvinyl acetate (PVA) and water In “wet” glue, polymer molecules are lubricated by water As glue dries, many more H-bonds form between the polymer molecules, so the glue hardens
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23 8.3 Intermolecular Forces strong London dispersionDipole-dipoleHydrogen bonding Types of intermolecular attractions Between polar molecules Between nonpolar molecules Intermolecular attractions are also called van der Waals attractions Intermolecular attractions weak
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24 8.3 Intermolecular Forces London dispersion Isolated hydrogen molecules are nonpolar A temporary, very small polarity can be induced when nonpolar molecules are close enough
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25 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Molecules with a larger surface area will attract ____strongly. more less London dispersion propane pentane A temporary, very small polarity can be induced when nonpolar molecules are close enough
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26 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Molecules with a larger surface area will attract ____strongly. more less London dispersion propane pentane A temporary, very small polarity can be induced when nonpolar molecules are close enough
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27 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Molecules with a larger surface area will attract ____strongly. Boiling point Molecules that attract more strongly will have a boiling point. higher lower more less London dispersion
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28 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Boiling point Molecules that attract more strongly will have a boiling point. higher lower London dispersion (It takes more energy to overcome the intermolecular forces.) more Molecules with a larger surface area will attract ____strongly. less
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29 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Molecules with larger surface area attract more strongly and have a higher boiling point propanebutanepentane least surface area –42 o C0oC0oC36 o C Boiling points most surface area London dispersion
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30 8.3 Intermolecular Forces London dispersion The shape of the molecule also matters! About the same surface area Stronger attraction Weaker attraction Higher boiling point Lower boiling point
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31 8.3 Intermolecular Forces Intermolecular attractions weakstrong London dispersionDipole-dipoleHydrogen bonding Types of intermolecular attractions Between polar molecules Between nonpolar molecules Intermolecular attractions are also called van der Waals attractions
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