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 held tight by strong electrostatic forces in between cations and anions  non-volatile, high mp, high bp  solid at room temp  hard and brittle because.

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Presentation on theme: " held tight by strong electrostatic forces in between cations and anions  non-volatile, high mp, high bp  solid at room temp  hard and brittle because."— Presentation transcript:

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3  held tight by strong electrostatic forces in between cations and anions  non-volatile, high mp, high bp  solid at room temp  hard and brittle because of a 3-D lattice/crystalline structure  conductivity › non-mobile e- as solid = no › ions move freely when melted = yes › cations and ions separate when dissolved in water = yes  soluble in polar solvents like water

4  strong intramolecular forces, weak intermolecular forces, usually liquids or gases at room temp or soft solid › strength of polarity and strength of London forces determine mp and bp  greater polarity = higher mp and bp  greater van der Waals’ = higher mp and bp  often dissolve in nonpolar solvents but not in strong polar solvents like water  do not conduct electricity

5  high mp and bp › decreases going down the periodic table  harder for cations to attract the sea of electrons › increases going across the periodic table  atomic radii becomes smaller, easier to attract the sea of electrons  low volatility  not soluble in most solvents (polar or non-polar)  conduct electricity well because of moving sea of electrons

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7  from highest to lowest 1. metallic bonds 2. ionic bonds (cations and anions) 4. hydrogen bonding (strong δ+ or δ-)  very strong when H is bonded with NOF (nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine) 5. dipole - dipole *δ+ or δ-) 6. London forces (weak, temporary δ+ or δ-)

8  generally speaking › the greater the intermolecular force (IMF) between the molecules, the higher the melting point, boiling point, and volatility (evaporate)  more electrons help increase the van der Waals’ forces and keep the substance in the liquid state  molecules that can stick together better remain a liquid at higher temps. boiling point increases this flat shape allows it to stick to one another better these round shapes do NOT allow them to stick to one another

9 hydrogen bonding can occur here which is the strongest type of dipole : dipole intermolecular force only normal dipole : dipole bonding can take place ethanol - higher BP dimethyl ether - lower BP Exampe: two Lewis structures for the formula C 2 H 6 O. Compare the boiling points of the two molecules.

10  “like dissolves like” › polar substances tend to dissolve in polar solvents (ex. water dissolves ionic compounds)  dissociation of salt YouTube (:53) dissociation of salt YouTube (:53) › non-polar substances tend to dissolve in non-polar solvents (ex. alcohol dissolves covalent molecules)

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12 ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ ++ –– ++ The dipoles of water attract, pushing the oil (with no partial charge) out of the way: attractions win out over the tendency toward randomness.

13  substances must possess Freely Moving Charged Particles › this occurs in…  metals with their “sea of electrons”  YouTube (1:05) YouTube (1:05)  molten ionic compounds (+ and – ions can move)  http://www.dynamicscience.com.au/tester/solutions/ chemistry/bonding/bonding5.htm http://www.dynamicscience.com.au/tester/solutions/ chemistry/bonding/bonding5.htm  ionic compounds in aqueous solution (dissolved in water)  water pulls apart + and – ions and allows them to move

14 Type of Bonding Melting Point Boiling Point Volatilit y Electrical Conductivity Solubility in Non- polar Solvent Solubilit y in Polar Solvent Non- polar Low HighNoYesNo Polarvaries No Yes Hydroge n bonding varies No Yes Ionic Bonding high lowYes (molten or aqueous) NoYes (most) Metallic Bonding high lowYesNo Covalentvaries No


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