Zumdahl Chapter 13
Zumdahl Chapter 13
Zumdahl Chapter 13
Chapter 13
1
Water
• Colorless, odorless and tasteless
• Density of ice < than density of liquid water
– Not the normal trend
– For equal masses of ice & water, ice has the larger volume
– For equal volumes of ice & water, water has the larger mass
– Water expands when it freezes
– Ice floats on water
– Density of liquid water = 1.00 g/mL
– Density of ice = 0.917 g/mL
2
Water
• Freezes at 0°C
– At 1 atm, solid at 0°C or below
– Normal freezing point = normal melting point
• Boils at 100°C
– At 1 atm, liquid up to 100°C, then turns to steam
– Normal boiling point
– Boiling point increases as atmospheric pressure increases
• Temperature stays constant during a state change
• Relatively large amounts of energy needed to melt solid
or boil liquid
• Liquid’s Specific Heat Capacity = 4.18 J/g-°C
3
Heating Curve
5
Representations of the gas,
liquid, and solid states.
6
Energy Requirements for
State Changes
7
Energy Requirements for
State Changes
8
Why do Molecules Attract Each Other?
• Intermolecular attractions are due to attractive
forces between opposite charges
• + Ion to - ion
• + End of polar molecule to - end of polar molecule
– H-bonding especially strong
• Larger the charge = Stronger attraction
• Even non-polar molecules have attractions due to
opposite charges
– London Dispersion Forces
9
Intermolecular Attraction
• Much weaker than ionic or covalent bonds
– Become weaker as distance between molecules
increases
• Dipole-to-Dipole intermolecular attraction due to
molecular polarity
• Hydrogen Bond is a special type of very strong
dipole-to-dipole intermolecular attraction
– Water has very strong H-bonds
• London Dispersion Forces are intermolecular
attractions between non-polar molecules
10
Intramolecular (bonding) forces exist between the
atoms in a molecule and hold the molecule together.
Intermolecular forces exist between molecules.
11
Dipole-to-Dipole Attractions
• Size of permanent dipole depends on the
bonded atoms and shapes of molecules
• Individually, dipole-to-dipole attraction is
stronger than induced dipole-to-induced dipole
attraction
– But for larger molecules the London Dispersion forces
become more important for predicting the physical
properties
12
(a) The interaction of two polar molecules.
(b) The interaction of many dipoles in a
liquid.
13
Hydrogen Bonding
• Molecules that have -OH or -NH groups have
particularly large intermolecular attractions
– Also the HF molecule
– unusually high melting and boiling points
– unusually high solubility in water
• As electrons are pulled away from H by an
electronegative atom, what is left is an
unshielded proton that will strongly attract
neighboring electrons
14
Hydrogen bonding among water
molecules.
15
London Dispersion Forces
• Also Known As Induced Dipoles
• Caused by electrons on one molecule distorting the
electron cloud on another
• All molecules have them
• Temporary
• Size of the London Dispersion Force depends on the
number of electrons and shapes of molecules
– the larger the molar mass, the larger the induced dipole
- - - --
- - - - - --
- + - + - - -+ - - -+
- - - - + -+ - - + -+
- - - - - - - - - -
- -- + - -- +
- - - - - -
16
The atom on the left develops an instantaneous
dipole when more electrons happen to
congregate on the left than on the right.
17
Nonpolar
molecules
also interact
by
developing
instantaneou
s dipoles.
Attractive Forces and Properties
• Larger attractive forces between molecules in pure
substance means
– higher boiling point
– higher melting point (though also depends on crystal
packing)
• Like dissolves Like
– Polar molecules dissolve in polar solvents
• Water, alcohol
• Molecules with O or N higher solubility in H2O due to
H-bonding with H2O
– Non-polar molecules dissolve in non-polar solvents
• Oils and gasoline
19
Evaporation
• Also Known As Vaporization
• Requires overcoming intermolecular attractions
• Heat of Vaporization is amount of energy
needed to evaporate 1 mole of liquid
• Condensation the reverse
• In a closed container, eventually the rate of
evaporation and condensation are equal
– Equilibrium
– In open system, evaporation continues until all liquid
evaporated
20
Vapor Pressure
• Pressure exerted by a vapor in equilibrium with a liquid
– Or solid
• Increases with temperature
• Larger intermolecular forces = Lower Vapor Pressure
• Liquid boils when its Vapor Pressure = Atmospheric Pressure
– Normal boiling point
– Raising external pressure raises boiling point, & visa versa
Equilibrium
Liquid just
poured into
open
container,
little vapor Evaporation faster Evaporation as fast
than Condensation as Condensation
21
Solids
• amorphous solids
– show no definite structure
• therefore strengths of intermolecular forces vary over the
structure
• glass, plastic, rubber
– tend to soften and melt over a temperature range
• crystalline solids
– orderly, repeating, 3-dimensional pattern
– pattern = crystal lattice
– melt at one specific temperature
22
Crystalline Solids
Metallic Molecular Ionic Atomic
Networks
malleable & brittle & weak, or hard & brittle very hard
ductile soft & waxy
solids
Usually high MP MP < 300°C MP > 300°C MP > 1000°C
High BP Low BP Very high BP Very high BP
High Hvap Low Hvap, High Hvap, Very high Hvap,
Hfusion Hfusion Hfusion
high density low density medium density medium density
good conductor insulator good electrical very insulating
conductor when very unreactive
molten or
dissolved in water
soluble in other solubility varies often soluble in dissolve in very few
metals water things
23
Types of Crystalline Solids
• Type of solid depends on type of particle that makes it
up
• Properties of crystalline solid depend on the forces of
attraction between the particles
• Ionic solids are made up of cations and anions arranged
in a pattern that maximizes the interaction between ions
– Strong forces between ions
– Attractions are for all surrounding ions
24
Types of Crystalline Solids
25
Types of Crystalline Solids
26
The regular
arrangement
of sodium and
chloride ions
in sodium
chloride, a
crystalline
solid.
Types of Crystalline Solids
• Atomic Solids that are made of metal atoms
– metal atoms release their valence electrons
– metal cations fixed in a “sea” of mobile electrons
– Leads to strong attractions that are non-directional
+ + + + + + + + +
e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e-
+ + + + + + + + +
e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e-
+ + + + + + + + +
28
Several crystalline solids: quartz, SiO2;
rock salt, NaCl; and iron pyrite, FeS2.
29
Metallic Bonding & Properties
30
Metallic Bonding & Properties
31
Metallic Solutions
32