Intermolecular Forces

14
Courtesy: labinitio.

description

Intermolecular Forces. Courtesy: labinitio.com. A phase is a homogeneous part of a system in contact with other parts of the system but separated from them by a well-defined boundary. 2 Phases. Solid phase - ice. Liquid phase - water. Characteristic Properties of - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Intermolecular Forces

Page 1: Intermolecular Forces

Courtesy: labinitio.com

Page 2: Intermolecular Forces

A phase is a homogeneous part of a system in contact with other parts of the system but separated from them by a well-defined boundary.

2 Phases

Solid phase - ice

Liquid phase - water

Page 3: Intermolecular Forces

Gases:•Assumes the volume and shape of its container.•Low Density•Very Compressible•Very Free Motion

Page 4: Intermolecular Forces

Liquids:•Has a definite volume but assumes the shape of its container.•High Density•Only Slightly Compressible•Molecules slide past one another easily.

Page 5: Intermolecular Forces

Solids:•Has definite volume and shape.•High Density•Virtually Incompressible•Molecules vibrate about a fixed position.

Page 6: Intermolecular Forces

•Intermolecular forces are attractive forces between molecules.•Intramolecular forces hold atoms together in a molecule.Intermolecular vs Intramolecular

• 41 kJ to vaporize 1 mole of water (inter)

• 930 kJ to break all O-H bonds in 1 mole of water (intra)

Generally, intermolecular forces are much weaker than intramolecular forces.

“Measure” of intermolecular force

boiling point

melting point

Hvap

Hfus

Hsub

Page 7: Intermolecular Forces

Types of Intermolecular Forces1. Hydrogen Bond (strongest)The hydrogen bond is a special dipole-dipole interaction between the hydrogen atom in a polar N-H, O-H, or F-H bond and an electronegative O, N, or F atom. IT IS NOT A BOND.

A H … B A H … Aor

A & B are N, O, or F

Page 8: Intermolecular Forces

Figure (a): The polar water molecule.Figure (b): Hydrogen bonding among water molecules. Note that the small size of the hydrogen atom allows for close interactions.

Page 9: Intermolecular Forces

Hydrogen Bonding

Electrostatic potential diagrams – red indicates the most electron-rich region and blue indicates the most electron-poor region.

Page 10: Intermolecular Forces

•Hydrogen bonding has very important effect on physical properties.•Note that the nonpolar tetrahedral hydrides of Group 4A (14) show a steady increase in boiling point with molar mass (i.e., going down the group).•But in the other groups the lightest member has the highest boiling point.

Page 11: Intermolecular Forces

Why do H2O, HF, and NH3 break the trend of decreasing molar mass = decreasing boiling point?

Unusually strong hydrogen bonding forces due to two factors: 1.relatively large electronegativity values which leads to especially polar X-H bonds 2.small size of the element, which allows for the close approach of the dipoles, strengthening the intermolecular forces.

Hydrogen bonding is so strong it takes a great amount of energy to overcome attraction and separate the molecules to produce the gaseous state.

Page 12: Intermolecular Forces

Types of Intermolecular Forces

2. Dipole-Dipole Forces

Attractive forces between polar molecules

Page 13: Intermolecular Forces

Types of Intermolecular Forces3. London Dispersion Forces – (weakest)

Attractive forces that arise as a result of temporary dipoles induced in atoms or molecules

ion-induced dipole interaction

dipole-induced dipole interaction

Page 14: Intermolecular Forces

Intermolecular Forces3. London Dispersion Forces Continued

Polarizability is the ease with which the electron distribution in the atom or molecule can be distorted.

Polarizability increases with:

• greater number of electrons

Dispersion forces usually increase with molar mass.