Q3 Module 1A - Intermolecular Forces of Attraction
Q3 Module 1A - Intermolecular Forces of Attraction
Q3 Module 1A - Intermolecular Forces of Attraction
gallium indium
zinc plutonium
QUARTER 3 - LESSON 1 A
WHAT I NEED TO
KNOW
After going through this module, you are expected to:
• Condensed phases
Liquids and solids
•
Intermolecular forces are attractive forces between molecules.
(Example: water molecule to water molecule)
Intramolecular forces hold atoms together within in a molecule.
(Example: H to O bond within a water 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)
2. Dipole-Dipole Interactions
3. Ion-Dipole Interactions
-(Salt dissolving in solution; Na+ and Cl- )
Butane has a higher boiling point because the dispersion
forces are greater.
http://www.chemguide.co.uk/atoms/bonding/vdw.html
Polarizability
the ease with which the electron distribution in the atom or
molecule can be distorted.
Dispersion
forces usually
increase with
molar mass.
11.2
Is the Molecule Polar?
The more Electronegative atom will pull the electron density of the bond
Closer to itself giving it a partial negative charge leaving the other
Atom with a partially positive charge. This is a dipole moment.
Molecules with 3 Atoms
Even though the C-O bond is polar, the bonds
CO2 cancel each other out because the molecule is
linear the dipole moments are equal and in
opposite directions.Therefore CO2 is non-polar.
CCl4 is non-polar
CHCl3 is polar
How to Determine if a Molecule
Is Polar
O S O
H
H O
dipole moment dipole moment
polar molecule polar molecule
H C H
O C O
no dipole moment H
nonpolar molecule no dipole moment
nonpolar molecule
10.2
Dipole-Dipole Forces
Animation: http://chemmovies.unl.edu/ChemAnime/DIPOLED/DIPOLED.html
11.2
Dipole Forces occur between molecules containing a dipole moment.
The positive end of the dipole moment on one mole is attracted to the
Negative end of the dipole moment on a nearby molecule.
2-methyl propane
Figure 10-11
(left) and acetone (right)
Both compounds are about
Equal in size and shape
Olmsted Williams
Ion-Dipole Forces
HBr
HBr is a polar molecule: dipole-dipole forces. There are
also dispersion forces between HBr molecules.
CH4
CH4 is nonpolar: dispersion forces.
S O
SO2 O
SO2 is a polar molecule: dipole-dipole forces. There are
also dispersion forces between SO2 molecules.
11.2
THE HYDROGEN BOND
STRONGEST
INTERMOLECULAR
FORCE
http://chemmovies.unl.edu/ChemAnime/HYBOND/HYBONDD.html
Animation
water has
water
water
thehashas
water
thehas
highest
water theheat
has highest
highest
the the
heat
lowest highest
of
of fusion
melting
molar vaporization
mass point
boiling point
F—H
O—H
N—H
• it will be attracted to another F, O, or N, on another
molecule.
13.8
WHAT’S MORE
Activity 3. Let’s Test Your Understanding!
Directions: Read and answer each question carefully.
1. (a) Which type of intermolecular attractive force operates between all molecules?
(b) Which type of intermolecular attractive force operates only between polar molecules?
(c) Which type of intermolecular attractive force operates only between the hydrogen atom of a polar
bond and a nearby small electronegative atom?
2. (a) What is meant by the term polarizability?
(b) Which of the following atoms would you expect to be most polarizable: N, P, As, Sb? Explain.
(c) List the following molecules in order of increasing polarizability: GeCl 4, CH4, SiCl4, SiH4,and
GeBr4.
(d) Arrange the boiling points of the substances in part (c) in increasing order.
3. Which of the following can form hydrogen bonds with water?
CH3OCH3, CH4, F-, HCOOH, Na+.
4. As a metal such as lead melts, what happens to
(a) the average kinetic energy of the atoms?
(b) the average distance between the atoms?
WHAT I HAVE LEARNED
Activity 4. Analyze!
Directions: Read and answer each question carefully.
1. (a) Does the diagram best describe a crystalline solid, a liquid, or a gas?
(b) Explain.
Brown, 2015
Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.
Alternative Proxies: