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PH-PHR 216 Physical Pharmacy: @mei - Sria !1

This document discusses intermolecular forces of attraction that exist between molecules and influence their physical properties. It describes four main types of attractive forces - van der Waals forces, hydrogen bonding, induced dipole-dipole interactions, and ion-dipole interactions - and provides examples of each. It also explains how these intermolecular forces determine the relative strengths of binding between molecules and impact characteristics like boiling point. Drug action and pharmacological effects are influenced by the type and strength of intermolecular forces between a drug and its receptor.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views

PH-PHR 216 Physical Pharmacy: @mei - Sria !1

This document discusses intermolecular forces of attraction that exist between molecules and influence their physical properties. It describes four main types of attractive forces - van der Waals forces, hydrogen bonding, induced dipole-dipole interactions, and ion-dipole interactions - and provides examples of each. It also explains how these intermolecular forces determine the relative strengths of binding between molecules and impact characteristics like boiling point. Drug action and pharmacological effects are influenced by the type and strength of intermolecular forces between a drug and its receptor.
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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PH-PHR 216 Physical Pharmacy

INTERMOLECULAR FORCES OF ATTRACTION - like dissolves like


- essential to form solids, liquids, and gases. - Polar molecules likes bonding with another polar
- reason why different phases are formed molecules
- drugs are composed of different phases of 2. Dipole-Induced dipole (Semipolar) - Interaction
matter between a polar and non-polar molecule
(induced) (at least 8 C)
1. BINDING FORCES - AKA Debye Forces
- Cohesion - Binding between similar molecules (at - Mechanism: Induction
least two molecules) (strongest) - e.g. Ethyl acetate, ether, methylene chloride
- Adhesion - Binding between different molecules
(surface lang)

- Repulsive forces - any force that will act to break


this bond; act to prevent molecules from - molecules with semi-polarity (semi-miscible -
annihilating each other. (weakest) parts which impart nonpolarity in the
molecule. Molecule has both polar and non-
2. ATTRACTIVE FORCES polar parts/components:
- Caused by dipoles (polar molecules - dipole
moment ^ = Polarity ^ ) and induced-dipoles
(nonpolar molecules - equal sharing of electrons
but there are instances when those electrons
repel and go to a side of a molecule making the
other side defficient of electrons making it
partially positive. INDUCTION)
FOUR TYPES OF ATTRACTIVE FORCES
1. Van der Waals Forces 3. Induced Dipole-Induced-Dipole (Nonpolar) -
- weak forces that involve displacement of Interaction between two non-polar molecules
charge (weakest)
- Exist in all atoms and all molecules - AKA London Forces
- easy to break, weak forces - Mechanism: Dispersion
=Three Groups of Van der Waals= - Hydrophobic bonds - not miscible in water
1. Dipole-dipole (Polar) - Interaction between two - e.g. Carbon disulfide, Carbon Tetrachloride,
polar molecules (strongest) hexane
- AKA Keesom Forces
- Mechanism: Orientation
or alignment. e.g. water,
ethanol, HCl (gas), phenol
(all polar molecules)
@mei_sria !1
PH-PHR 216 Physical Pharmacy
2. Hydrogen bonds - electrostatic interaction of H - e.g. H2O+ NaCl -> NaCl (aq)
with highly electronegative atoms (S, N, Cl, F, O)
- Accounts for unusual properties of water ->
indicative of solubility in water (^ hydrogen
bonds = ^ solubility in water) (“molecule”-
organic compounds; “compound”-inorganic
compounds)
- eg. ascorbic acid - presence of diff hydroxyl
groups
- ^ C-chain = V H-bonding = V Solubility in water
- octanol - semipolar- debye (more than this =
immiscible in water)
- Strong IMF (electrostatic) - presence of additional and stronger bonds
- Partly covalent as the election of the H atom is (attractive forces) increasing the boilling point
- higher temperatures needed to break
substantially delocalized to the electronegative
4. Ion-induced dipole interaction -induced by
atom.
- e.g. in the body: DNA - Hydrogen bonds close proximity of a charged ion to the nonpolar
molecules
connects the nitrogenous bases.
- e.g. formation of iodide complex (I2 + K+I- ->
K+I3-) Adding a solubilizing agent (e.g.
povidone or potassium iodide) for the iodine to
remain in the solution.
- Nonpolar molecule + ionic compound

Relative strength of Non-Covalent Interactions (IMF)


Weakest to strongest (range = depends on nature
of the substance)
1. London Dispersion Forces - 0.0.5-40 kJ/mol
3. Ion-dipole interaction - Ionic compound and a
2. Debye Forces - 2-10 kJ/mol
polar molecule
3. Ion-induced dipole interaction 3-15 kJ/mol
4. Keesom Forces 5-25 kJ/mol
5. Hydrogen bonds - 10-40 kJ/mol
6. Ion-dipole interaction 40-600 kJ/mol
7. Ionic bond
- More polar - Higher boiling point

- salt dissolved in a polar solvent.

@mei_sria !2
PH-PHR 216 Physical Pharmacy
Pharmacological effect
- Drug-Receptor Complex - binding caused by
Intermolecular Forces of Attraction
- Stronger bond - longer half-life of the drug
- in organic medicinal chemistry

PROPERTIES OF SYSTEM
Extensive Property vs Intensive Property
1. Extensive - a property that depends on the
quantity of a matter observed
- Mass
- Length
- Volume
GUIDE
2. Intensive - a property that is independent on the
quantity of matter observed
- Temperature
- Pressure
- Density
- Viscosity
- Surface Tension
- Specific gravity
- Color
- Concentration (Molarity, Molality, Normality)

EXERCISE PROPERTIES OF SUBSTANCES


Determine Interactive forces present in the structure 1. Additive Property - depends on the total
ASA Aspirin contribution of the atoms in the molecules. e.g.
LDF - Benzene ring Molecular weight, mass; synonymous to
Keesom - Carboxylic Acids Extensive property
Hydrogen Bonding 2. Constitutive Property - depends on the
arrangement and on the number and kind of
Ascorbic Acid atoms wihtin a molecule. e.g. Refractive index,
Hydrogen Bonding optical rotation; bending light
Debye 3. Colligative Property - depends on the number of
species/particles/solutes in solution. e.g. vapor
Paracetamol pressure lowering, boiling point elevation,
Hydrogen Bonding freezing point deperssion, osmosis.
LDF
Keesom

@mei_sria !3

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