intermolecular forces

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Intermolecular Forces. Mr. NelsonAP Chem. Intermolecular Forces. Forces that exist between molecules Also called Van der Waals forces Compare to intramolecular forces, which are the forces that hold atoms together - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Intermolecular Forces

Mr. Nelson AP Chem

Intermolecular ForcesForces that exist between

moleculesAlso called Van der Waals forces

Compare to intramolecular forces, which are the forces that hold atoms togetherHolds individual molecules together, but does not determine macro properties (aka boiling point)

Intermolecular ForcesLargely determines physical

properties of solids and liquids Intermolecular forces are

weaker than intramolecular forces (chemical bonding)

Boiling points and melting points are an indication of the strength of intermolecular forces

Ion-Dipole forcesInteraction between an ion and a

partial charge in a polar moleculeNot technically a van der Waals force

Positive ions are attracted to negative end of a dipoleForce depends on dipole moment of polar molecule and charge of the ion

Example: NaCl in Water

Dipole-dipole forceAttractive forces between polar

moleculesWeaker than ion-dipole forces

Positive end of one molecule is near negative end of another

In liquids, molecules of equal size and mass have increasing intermolecular attractions with increasing polarity

London Dispersion Forces

London proposed that the motion of electrons in an atom or molecule can create an instantaneous dipole momentExample: If both electrons on an He atom are on the same side of a nucleus, you have an instantaneous dipole moment

London Dispersion Forces

A temporary dipole on one atom can induce a similar dipole on an adjacent atom (called an induced dipole)

London Dispersion Forces

Because of induced dipoles, molecules attract one another

Dispersion forces exist in all types of molecules (polar or non-polar, charged or not)

In many cases, dispersion forces can be stronger than dipole-dipoleExample: CH3F (B.P. -78.9 °C) vs. CCl4 (B.P. 76.5 °C)

London Dispersion Forces

Dispersion forces increase with molar mass of the moleculeMore electrons allows for greater chances of dispersion

When comparing molecules of similar weights and shapes, dipole-dipole forces tend to be the decisive factor

When comparing differing weights, dispersion forces is the decisive factor

Intermolecular Forces Recap

ExampleOf Br2, Ne, HCl, HBr, and N2, which has:The largest intermolecular dispersion forces?

The largest dipole-dipole attractive forces?

Hydrogen BondingA special type of dipole-

dipole attraction that exists between hydrogen atoms in a polar bond and small electronegative ions

Can only form between hydrogen and N, O, or F

Hydrogen BondingWater has a

lower molar mass and a higher boiling point

Dispersion forces do not account for this

Hydrogen Bonding Explains density of ice

Solid is less dense than liquid (not common)

Review of IM forcesIon-Dipole Forces•Exist when ions and dipole present•Stronger than simply dipole-dipole

Dipole-Dipole Forces•Between polar molecules only•Larger dipole = larger force

Dispersion Forces•Between all molecules•Higher molar mass = larger force

Hydrogen Bonding•Strongest IM Force•Exists only between H with either N, O, or F

Phase ChangesChanges in state of matter

In general, each state of matter can change into either of the two other states

Phase changes require energy

When becoming a more disordered state, requires energy to overcome intermolecular forces that hold them together

Phase Changes

Phase ChangesMelting, vaporization, and sublimation are all endothermic processes

Freezing, condensation, and deposition are all exothermic processes

Phase Changes Fusion

Melting of a solidMolar heat of fusion or enthalpy of fusion (∆Hfus)

∆Hfusion = -∆Hsolidification

VaporizationVaporizing of a liquidMolar heat of vaporization or enthalpy of vaporization (∆Hvap)

∆Hvaporization = -∆Hcondensation

Heating CurvesGraph of temperature of the

system versus heat added to the system

Some segments of the graph are heating as single phase others are converting one phase to another

Heat change when temp. inc. is given by q=mC∆T. During phase change, it is q=n∆H (n is moles of substance)

Heating Curve of Water

Phase Change Problem Freon-11 (CCl3F) has a normal boiling

point of 23.8 °C. The specific heat of CCl3F (l) is 0.87 J/g K and CCl3F (g) is 0.59 J/g K. The heat of vaporization is 24.75 kJ/mole. Calculate the heat required to convert 10.0 g of Freon-11 from liquid at -50.0 °C to gas at 50.0 °C.

Vapor PressureIn a closed system, liquid will

initially evaporate and then condense back into its liquid form

The pressure exerted by this liquid/gas equilibrium is called vapor pressure

When evaporation occurs in an open system, no equilibrium can be established

Vapor Pressure Substances with high vapor pressure

evaporate more easily than those with a low vapor pressure

Volatile liquids (aka liquids that evaporate easily) have high vapor pressures

Water can vaporize at room temp. because molecules in liquid move at different speeds and some can overcome IM forces (think space shuttles/escape velocity)

Vapor PressureAs the number of gas

molecules increases in a closed system, the probability that gas molecules will strike the liquid increases.

This allows the molecules to become “trapped” by the IM forces of the liquid

http://www.mhhe.com/physsci/chemistry/essentialchemistry/flash/vaporv3.swf

Temperature & Vapor Pressure

Vapor pressure increases nonlinearly with temperature

More molecules have enough KE to escape into gas phase

Vapor Pressure & Boiling Point

Boiling point is when the vapor pressure equals the external pressure acting on the surfaceA “normal” boiling point is measured at 1 atm

A more volatile liquid has a lower boiling point and a higher vapor pressure (and vice versa)

Phase Diagrams A graph that displays the conditions

under which an equilibrium exists between different states of matter

Allows prediction of a substance’s state of matter at a given temperature and pressure

Phase DiagramsCritical Temperature (Tc) is the

highest temperature a substance can exist as a liquidMeaning above Tc molecular motion breaks IM attraction (Tc measures strength of IM forces)

Critical Pressure (Pc) is pressure required to bring about liquefaction at the critical temperature

Phase DiagramsTriple Point is the place at

which all three phases exist at equilibrium

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