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Chemsheets As 015 (Forces Between Molecules)

The document discusses different types of intermolecular forces including van der Waals forces, permanent dipole-dipole attractions, and hydrogen bonding. It explains that hydrogen bonding is the strongest of these forces, followed by permanent dipole-dipole attractions and then van der Waals forces. Examples are given of boiling points corresponding to different intermolecular forces.

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0% found this document useful (2 votes)
3K views

Chemsheets As 015 (Forces Between Molecules)

The document discusses different types of intermolecular forces including van der Waals forces, permanent dipole-dipole attractions, and hydrogen bonding. It explains that hydrogen bonding is the strongest of these forces, followed by permanent dipole-dipole attractions and then van der Waals forces. Examples are given of boiling points corresponding to different intermolecular forces.

Uploaded by

burhan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1) Van der Waals' forces (induced dipole-dipole forces)

Even in molecules with no polar bonds, there are temporary dipoles due to uneven electron distribution due to the
constant movement of electrons.

This induces a temporary dipole in a neighbouring molecule, producing a temporary induced dipole-dipole
attraction.

The bigger the molecule (i.e. the more electrons), the greater the van der Waals' forces (e.g. C2H6 boiling point 89C, C3H8 boiling point -42C).

2) Permanent dipole-dipole attraction

Some molecules with polar bonds have an overall dipole (e.g. + HCl ) [although not all do (e.g. CCl4 - the
individual dipoles cancel each other out)].

There are attractions between these permanent dipoles in neighbouring molecules (e.g. between H-Cl molecules).

3) Hydrogen bonding

This is a special case of permanent dipole-dipole attractions where an H atom is bonded to a very
electronegative atom (i.e. F, O, N)

The polar bond leaves the H nucleus exposed as H only has one electron.

Therefore there is a strong attraction from the lone pair on the N, O or F of one molecule to the exposed H nucleus
of another molecule.

This is simply a strong intermolecular force it is NOT a bond!


+

e.g. NH3

N
H
+

N
H
+

e.g. H2O

e.g. HF

www.CHEMSHEETS.co.uk

07-Jul-12

Chemsheets AS 015

The strength of intermolecular forces

H-bonding > permanent dipole-dipole > van der Waals'

Covalent bonds are very strong (values in hundreds of kJ mol ). The forces between molecules are much weaker,
-1
-1
with van der Waals forces being in units of kJ mol and hydrogen bonds in tens of kJ mol (dipole-dipole attractions
are inbetween).

-1

Some comparisons
Molecule

CH4

HCl

H2O

Boiling points (C)

-162

-85

100

Intermolecular forces

Boiling points of hydrides of Groups 4, 5, 6 and 7

In each pair of molecules, which molecule has the highest boiling point and why?
1)

Br2 & I2

2)

Br2 & HBr

3)

H2O & H2S

4)

CH4 & C4H10

5)

CH3OCH3 & CH3CH2OH

6)

(CH3)3N & (CH3)2NH

7)

CCl4 & CHCl3

www.CHEMSHEETS.co.uk

07-Jul-12

Chemsheets AS 015

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