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What are intermolecular forces?  NOT chemical bonds, less strength  Attractive forces between molecules involved in covalent bonding  Molecular level,

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Presentation on theme: "What are intermolecular forces?  NOT chemical bonds, less strength  Attractive forces between molecules involved in covalent bonding  Molecular level,"— Presentation transcript:

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2 What are intermolecular forces?  NOT chemical bonds, less strength  Attractive forces between molecules involved in covalent bonding  Molecular level, not individual atoms  Develop solid and liquid physical properties  Types  Dipole-Dipole  London Dispersion  Hydrogen Bonding

3 1. (London) Dispersion Forces  TEMPORARILY uneven charge distribution  Instantaneous movement of electrons from one location to another creating charge separation for a moment  Influences electron distribution of neighboring atoms--- ”induced dipoles”  At SOME point in time, electron density is greater around one atom than the other  Induces temporary dipoles in adjacent molecules  Found between ALL atoms/molecules at varying degrees, some occur more frequently than others

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5 1. (London) Dispersion Forces (cont.)  Mobile electron density  “attractive force between instantaneous dipole and induced dipoles” (p. 450)  Molecular shape influences the strength of intermolecular forces within a molecule  Larger, elongated molecules have more surface area, create more dispersion forces  Melting and boiling points indicative of intermolecular force strength

6 1. (London) Dispersion Forces cont.  Polarizability—  Ability of an electric field to alter a molecule/atom’s electron charge density  How easily can a dipole be induced in a molecule or atom  polarizability,  strength of intermolecular forces (WHY?) **Atomic/molecular sizes influence polarizability and strength of intermolecular forces—WHY???

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8 1. (London) Dispersion Forces cont. Ex. Halogens  Nonpolar  Size increases, force is strong and can form liquids and solids

9 2. Dipole-Dipole Forces2. Dipole-Dipole Forces  Found in polar molecules  More intermolecular forces (dipole in addition to dispersion)  Molecules arranged so the POSITIVE end of one molecule is oriented toward the NEGATIVE end of another molecule  Dipole —equal and opposite charge separation over a short distance in a molecule  Permanent dipoles between molecules

10 2. Dipole-Dipole Forces (cont.)  Acts on adjacent molecules, opposite charges on “neighboring” molecules attract ( dipole-induced dipole forces )  Permanent dipole in one molecule induces dipole in neighboring molecule  molecule polarity,  influence of these forces on physical properties.  Polar molecules have “net attractive forces” from all intermolecular forces existing in the molecules.

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13 Ex. HClEx. HCl

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15 How can we generally predict physical properties of molecular compounds? (MP, BP, etc.)  dispersion force strength,  molecular mass and size  Polar compounds have dipole/dipole and dipole/induced forces  Dispersion forces are found with ALL molecular compounds

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17 3. Hydrogen Bonding3. Hydrogen Bonding  Type of intermolecular force, strong dipole-dipole force  H atom is bonded to an electronegative (nonmetal) atom and is attracted to the electronegative (nonmetal) atom in a neighboring molecule  Majority of H-bonding occurs among small, very electronegative, nonmetal atoms (N, O, F)  Dotted lines represent hydrogen bonding

18 Hydrogen Bonding (cont.)Hydrogen Bonding (cont.)  Considered a FORCE, not a type of bond  Force holding water molecules together  Results from a negative charge on an atom and a positive charge on hydrogen  H-X format

19 Example: H 2 O, HFExample: H 2 O, HF

20 Unique Properties of Water due to Hydrogen Bonding  Freezes and expands as solid  Solid is less dense than liquid (ex. Ice floats)  High melting point  High boiling point  H-bonding strength greater than other intermolecular forces  Highest surface tension (Hg only exception)  Other compounds can easily dissolve in it  High specific heat

21 Biological Applications to H-Bonding  Protein Structure  Enzyme Activity  DNA structure

22 ALL DUE TO HYDROGEN BONDING !

23 Homework—  Read pp. 417-418 (Problems #61, 63, 67)  Read pp. 450-461


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