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Explore the different types of intermolecular attractions, from macro-covalent to hydrogen bonding, and how they affect the properties and behavior of various substances. Learn about dipole-dipole forces, dispersion forces, and the significance of molecular polarity. Discover the impact of intermolecular forces on boiling points, states of matter, and unique phenomena like capillarity and surface tension. Dive into examples and exercises to enhance your understanding of this fundamental concept in chemistry.
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What is the difference? • What is the difference between: • Inter-molecular? • Intra-molecular? • More solid • Moves less • These are the forces that hold our world together!
Intermolecular Forces • Macro-covalent • Ionic • Metallic • Hydrogen • Dipole-Dipole • Dispersion
Macrocovalent • The strongest of them all. • Diamond (all Carbon atoms) • Rocks (Silicon and Oxygen) • See Toy Examples
carbon atoms • Covalent • Lattice points occupied by atoms • Held together by covalent bonds • Hard, high melting point • Poor conductor of heat and electricity • Examples graphite diamond
Non-crystalline quartz glass Crystalline quartz (SiO2)
Ionic • Very strong • Permanent strong charge interactions • Usually crystal in formation • Very high melting points • See toy example. • Example of Lattice
Metallic Bonding • Solids at room temperature • This means STRONG Intermolecular Forces • Metal Atoms give up electrons • This creates many dipoles throughout the atoms, they SHIFT but are always there • “SEA of electrons”
Hydrogen Bonding • A strong intermolecular attractions • Caused by very strong dipole-dipole attraction between molecules with N-H, O-H, and F-H bonds. • Responsible for many of water’s special properties.
Hydrogen Bond or … … H H B A A A 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 & B are N, O, or F
Dipole-Dipole Attraction • Caused by attraction of d+end of one polar molecule to d- of another polar molecule. • For a molecule to have dipoles it must be polar: A. Asymmetrical in shape and B. With polar bonds
Molecular Polarity • In order for a molecule to be polar it must have polar bonds and be asymmetrical in shape. Lone pairs always lead to asymmetry. • Linear, trigonal planar, and tetrahedral are symmetrical shapes and dipoles will cancel if all bonds are equal.
Orientation of Polar Molecules in a Solid Dipole-Dipole Forces Attractive forces between polar molecules
Dispersion Forces (non polar molecules) • “Moving the Fat Around” • Caused by momentary (temporary) dipoles (pg. 444) • Get stronger with increase in mass • Only attractive force between non-polar molecules (symmetrical or those with only non-polar bonds) or single atoms.
London Dispersion ForcesForce that exits among noble gas atoms and nonpolar moleculesCan create a temporary dipole moment
Boiling point is a true measure of the strength of intermolecular attractions. Why? Let’s look at the effect of size on nonpolar molecules. Conclusion?
Let’s compare strength of intermolecular attractions in molecules of the same size. F2 = nonpolar, NO = dipole-dipole, CH3OH = hydrogen bonding, Ca = metal, NaF = ionic. What does that say about the relative strength of these attractions?
State of Matter-(at room temp) • Ionic Compounds = Always Solid • Covalent Compounds-Solid, liquid or gas Depends on size and polarity. Gas small and non-polar or dipole-dipole Liquid small & H-bonding, or larger with non-polar or d/d Solid large and polar, or very large and non-polar.
Practice – Label each with Phase and type of IMF • SiO2 • Fe • CCl4 • NO • SO2 • C2H6 • C10H22 • Hg
O3 • CO2 • N2 • C(diamond) • C2H5OH • C2H21OH • SO3 • CI4
Practice – Label each with Phase and type of IMF Answers • SiO2 Solid, macrocovalent • Fe Solid, metallic • CCl4 liquid, nonpolar • NO gas, dipole-dipole • SO2 gas, dipole-dipole • C2H6 gas, non polar • C10H22 liquid, non-polar • Hg liquid, metallic
O3 gas, polar (assymetrical design) • CO2 gas, non polar (bent) • N2 gas, non-polar • C(diamond) solid, macrocovalent • C2H5OH liquid, H-bonding • C2H21OH liquid, H-bonding + dispersion • SO3 Gas, non polar (symmetrical) • CI4 gas, non polar
Affects of Intermolecular Forces Volatility Ability to evaporate • High when attractions are weak. Why? Compare volatility of alcohol and water. Capillarity Ability to climb up a tube or surface • High when liquid molecules are attracted to the tube or surface. Ex. Meniscus, paper towels, blood test
Surface Tension A “skin” develops on the surface of liquids. Water’s is very strong. • High when molecules are attracted to each other cohesion. Ex. Paper clip “floating” Water striders
More Surface Tension Examples • “Don’t touch the tent” • Rainx • Surfactants Soaps and detergents
Surfactants • Molecules that act to disrupt a liquid’s surface tension “wetting agent” • Structure-long non-polar hydrocarbon tail and a polar or ionic head
How do they work? • Disrupt surface tension by acting like a “wedge”
Surfactants as Cleaning Agents • Non-polar hydrophobic (water-hating) tails and polar or ionic hydrophilic (water-loving) heads form micelles.
Soap dissolves grease by taking grease molecules into the non-polar interior of the micelle. Micelles are carried away during rinsing.
Heating Curves Water Why is the plateau for boiling so much longer than for melting?
Solubility What dissolves in what? • Ionic substances dissolve in water • Covalent compounds: A. Non-polar dissolves in non-polar solvents. B. Polar solutes dissolve in polar solvents. C. Partially polar (only polar in a small part of the molecule) solutes dissolve in partially polar solvents. Like Dissolves Like!
The solute and the solvent have to be attracted to each other in order to dissolve. Ionic solid dissolving in water