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Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular...

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Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive • Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid solid • Solids
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Page 1: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4

• Intermolecular interactions

• Dispersive

• Dipolar

• Hydrogen-bonding

• Phases: gas, liquid solid

• Solids

Page 2: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Ideal Gas Law vs. van der Waals Eq.

• Remember Ideal Gas Law

• Empirically explained by the van der Waals equation

1or ==nRTpVnRTpV

( ) nRTnbVV

anp =−

+ 2

2

attraction molecular size

Page 3: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Melting and Boiling Points

• Both are indicators of the strengths of intermolecular forces:– Normal freezing point (fp): the temperature at which a solid

and liquid coexist at equilibrium under a pressure of 1 atm– Normal boiling point (bp): the temperature at which a liquid

and vapor coexist at equilibrium under a pressure of 1atm• Vaporization: l g• Condensation: g l

Page 4: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Types Intermolecular Interactions

1. Dispersion – attraction between the negatively charged electron cloud of one molecule and the positively charged nuclei of a neighbor molecule.

2. Dipolar – attraction between negatively charged portions of one molecule with the positively charged portions of another molecule.

3. Hydrogen bonding – attraction between lone pair electrons on an O, N or F atom with a partially positive hydrogen atom.

Page 5: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Dispersion Forces• Dispersion forces are found in all molecular substances• Such forces are electrostatic in nature and arise from

attractions between neighboring nuclei and electrons. Sometimes called induced dipoles.

• The magnitude of dispersion forces depends on how easy it is to polarize the electron cloud of a molecule.

• A larger molecule (more electrons) has a larger polarizability.

Page 6: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Boiling Point vs Molecular Size

Page 7: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Dipolar Forces

• Occur when one polar molecule encounters another polar molecule.

• The positive parts are attracted to negative parts.• Dipolar forces are usually stronger than dispersion forces.• Dipolar forces increase with an increase in the polarity of

the molecule.

Page 8: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Models of acetone and 2-methylpropane:

What is the big difference?

Acetone is a polar molecule, 2-methylpropane is not.

Therefore, acetone will experience dipolar forces, but 2-methylpropane will not.

2-methylpropane acetone

Page 9: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Order three molecules from lowest to highest boiling point.

54321

A B C

25%25%25%25% 1. lowest A B C highest

2. lowest C B A highest3. lowest A C B highest4. lowest B C A highest

Page 10: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Hydrogen Bonding Forces

1. One molecule has a hydrogen atom attached by a covalent bond to an atom of oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine, i.e. a polar H-X bond

2. The other molecule has a slightly negative oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine atom.

This is mostly just the attraction between slightly positive H and slightly negative O, N, or F

NOT REALLY A BOND

This is the strongest of all intermolecular forces

Page 11: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid
Page 12: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Many of water’s unusual properties are due to H-bonding

Page 13: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Solid vs. Liquid vs. Gas

• Gas– little intermolecular interaction– take on any shape– expand to fill any volume

• Liquid– strong intermolecular interaction– take on any shape– very resistant to compression (fixed volume)– exhibit surface tension, capillary action, viscosity, vapor pressure

• Solid– very strong intermolecular interaction– fixed volume and shape– extensive variety of molecular packing

Page 14: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Surface Tension

• The resistance of a liquid to an increase in its surface area. ORA liquid tends to minimize its surface area.

• The surface molecules of a liquid have a net inward force of attraction, forming a “skin”.

• The toughness of the skin is called surface tension.

Page 15: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Capillary Action– The upward movement of water up a capillary against

the force of gravity.– Due to attractive forces between the glass (polar) and

the water (also polar)

Viscosity– Resistance to flow– For example, water vs. oil

• Dependent on intermolecular forces• Dependent on size & shape of molecules

Page 16: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Vapor Pressure

Vapor pressure: the partial pressure of a vapor in dynamic equilibrium with its liquid (in a closed container).

Page 17: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Forces in solids

• In liquids and gases, molecules are free to move continually and randomly.

• In solids, particles are constrained to fixed positions.• Particles can only vibrate and occasionally rotate.• There are four major types:

– molecular solids– network solids– metallic solids– ionic solids

Page 18: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Forces in Solids

Page 19: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Network Solids of Carbon

Page 20: Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 · Lecture 34 Chapter 11 Sections 1 – 4 • Intermolecular interactions • Dispersive •Dipolar • Hydrogen-bonding • Phases: gas, liquid

Today• Finish reading Chapt 11• Finish CAPA• Take last year’s exam

Wednesday• Problems, problems, problems

Remember: You are done with the homework when you understand it!


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