Chapter 14 - Intermolecular Forces
Chapter 14 - Intermolecular Forces
Chapter 14 - Intermolecular Forces
o London Dispersion Forces (LDF): Sometimes called induced dipole forces or just dispersion
forces. Temporary dipole attractions between nonpolar molecules that form due to shifting
electrons. Electrons can concentrate in one region, which results in a temporary dipole that
disappears when the electrons shift again. So a temporary partially negative charge, - and
partially positive charge, +, forms.
This is the only type of IMF between nonpolar molecules.
Bigger molecules or atoms usually have stronger dispersion forces. (More electrons)
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 1
o Dipole-Dipole Forces (DDF): A permanent dipole force exists between polar molecules.
Attractions form between the partially positive and partially negative ends of adjacent polar
molecules.
Dipole forces are usually stronger than dispersion forces since the dipoles are permanent.
Only polar molecules can form dipole-dipole forces!
+ - + -
o Hydrogen Bonding Forces (HBF): An especially strong dipole force exists between molecules
containing H-F, H-O or H-N bonds. (These bonds are highly polar due to the large
electronegativity difference.) Also called H Bridging Force sometimes.
A very strong type of IMF between polar molecules.
Hydrogen Bridging
Forces
Image: www.en.wikipedia.org
o Ion-Dipole Forces (IDF): When an ionic compound such as NaCl dissolves in water, the water
molecules arrange their oppositely charged dipole to be attracted to the fully charged ion,
creating a very strong attractive force called an ion-dipole force.
Image: www.en.wikipedia.org
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 2
Electrostatic attractive forces that create the ionic bond in NaCl are ~10 times stronger than a
single ion-dipole force that is created between the ion and water. Only if enough water
molecules surround the ion creating many, many ion-dipole attractions can the water
molecule pull the ion away from the ionic crystal lattice, dissolving the ionic compound.
Example. Indicate the strongest type of intermolecular force (LDF, DDF, HBF, or IDF) between
the molecules in the following:
A. CO2
B. PF3
C. HF
D. CH4
E. KBr in H2O
Answers: A) nonpolar, LDF; B) polar, DDF; C) polar; HBF; D) nonpolar, LDF; E) polar, IDF
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 3
Summary
Bonds
Ionic bond – holds metal/nonmetal ions together
Polar Covalent Bond – e- shared unequally between nonmetals
Nonpolar Covalent Bond – e- shared equally between nonmetals
Forces
London Dispersion – nonpolar molecules
Dipole-dipole – polar molecules
Hydrogen Bonding Force – H bonded to N or O or F within the molecule
Ion-Dipole Force – a fully charged ion and a polar molecule.
S N S N S N N S
Opposite Charges Attract Same Charges Repel
o The electrostatic attraction between two charges is proportional to the charge magnitude (q) and
inversely proportional to the distance (r) squared.
o F = ke(q1q2 / r2)
o Larger charge means stronger attraction!
o Ionic bonds very strong cause charges are complete +1, +2, +3 charges. Like in NaCl.
o Dipole-dipole IMF are much weaker because charges are much less than +1.
o Remember polar bonds are only partially + and −.
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 4
Stronger intermolecular forces → lower vapor pressure
▪ stronger attractions are harder to break so less gas forms above liquid (B)
Weaker intermolecular forces → higher vapor pressure
▪ weaker attractions are easier to break so more gas forms above liquid (A)
Image: www.en.wikipedia.org
Image: www.en.wikipedia.org
H2O has a bent molecular geometry with bond angle of < 109.5
• Water has highly polar O-H bonds: can dissolve ionic compounds and mix with other polar
substances
• Water has strong H bonding forces between molecules resulted in observed physical properties
discussed below.
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 5
Physical Properties of Water
• Very polar, high IMF
• High bp and mp: bp = 100 C, mp = 0 C
• High surface tension, Low vapor pressure
• Water expands as it freezes Density of ice is less than density of liquid water (rare)
Gas
BP
Temperature (ºC)
Liquid
MP Solid
Heat Added
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 6
CHAPTER 14 PRACTICE PROBLEMS
Example 1. Indicate the strongest type of intermolecular force (Dispersion, Dipole-Dipole or Hydrogen bond)
between the molecules in the following:
A. CCl4
B. NH3
C. HCl
D. OF2
Example 2. Choose the bond or attraction described for each below: IMFs are attractions between molecules.
Bonds hold atoms together in a molecule.
A. polar covalent bond B. nonpolar covalent bond C. ionic bond D. metallic bond
E. dispersion force F. dipole-dipole force G. hydrogen bonding force
Example 3. Water molecules experience hydrogen bonding while hexane molecules experience dispersion
forces. Circle true or false for the following statements.
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 7
Answers to Practice Problems
Example 1.
Example 3:
A False, B True, C True, D true, E false, F true
Clark, Smith (CC-BY-SA 4.0) GCC CHM 130 Chapter 14: IMF page 8