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Ch. 16: Liquids and Solids. Intermolecular Forces. Intra- vs. Inter-. intramolecular forces inside molecules hold atoms together into molecule intermolecular forces between molecules get weaker as phase changes from S – L – G
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Ch. 16: Liquids and Solids Intermolecular Forces
Intra- vs. Inter- • intramolecular forces • inside molecules • hold atoms together into molecule • intermolecular forces • between molecules • get weaker as phase changes from S – L – G • When a substance changes state, molecule stays together but intermolecular forces weaken
Dipole-Dipole Attraction • when molecules with dipole moments line up to minimize repulsion and maximize attraction • very weak compared to covalent and ionic bonds
Hydrogen Bonding • happens between H and N, O, or F • very strong type of dipole-dipole attraction • because bond is so polar • because atoms are so small
London Dispersion Forces • in every molecular compound • only important for nonpolar molecules and noble gas atoms • weak, short-lived • caused by formation of temporary dipole moments
Practice • which has highest boiling pt? • HF, HCl, or HBr? • Identify the most important intermolecular forces : • BaSO4 • H2S • Xe • C2H6 • P4 • H2O • CsI ionic dipole-dipole H-bonding London Dispersion
CO2 or OCS CO2: nonpolar so only LD OCS: polar so dipole-dipole PF3 or PF5 PF3: polar so dipole-dipole PF5: nonpolar so only LD SF2 or SF6 SF2: polar so dipole-dipole SF6: nonpolar so only LD SO3 or SO2 SO3: nonpolar so LD only SO2: polar so dipol-dipole Which has stronger IMF’s?
Properties of Liquids • low compressibility • no rigidity • high density compared to gases • beads up as droplets • molecules on surface are subject to attractions from side and below • surface tension • resistance to an increase in surface area • greater tension means stronger IMF’s
Properties of Liquids • capillary action • spontaneous rising of a liquid up a tube • from cohesive forces (IMF’s) and adhesive forces (between liquid and container) • viscosity • measure of a liquid’s resistance to flow • strong IMF’s highly viscous • large, complex molecules highly viscous