Title: Noncovalent Molecular Forces Part 1
1Noncovalent Molecular Forces - Part 1
- Lecture Supplement
- Take one handout from the stage
2Chemistry 14C Part 3
Structure Controls Everything
?
Influence antibiotic behavior
3Noncovalent Molecular Forces
- Attractive forces (other than covalent bonding)
between atoms or molecules - Why should I study this?
Noncovalent forces control association of
molecules
Molecular organization into larger structures
membranes, etc. Molecular recognition
substrate/enzyme docking, etc.
4How Do We Measure Noncovalent Forces?
Consider evaporation of water...
- Stronger attractions more energy required to
break - more energy
needed for evaporation - higher boiling
point - Boiling point is useful approximation of
attractive forces - Boiling point easily measured
add energy
- Noncovalent attractive force disrupted
- Covalent bonds still intact
5How Do We Measure Noncovalent Forces?
- Boiling point temperature at which vapor
pressure of substance ambient pressure - Melting point influenced by...
- Attractive forces
- Crystal packing
What Kinds of Noncovalent Forces Occur?
Consider these substances NaCl bp 1413 oC H2O
bp 100 oC BrF bp 20 oC Ar bp -186 oC
6NaClbp 1413 oC
- What attractive force is operating?
- What is the nature of association between Na and
Cl?
Cl Na
3.0
EN
0.9
- DEN 3.0 - 0.9 2.1
- Attractive force ionic bond cation-anion
- electrostatic
(opposite charges attract)
- Evaporation or melting separating opposite
charges - NaCl evaporates as Na and Cl- not NaCl
- NaCl heat of vaporization 188 kcal mol-1
- High bp and mp typical of ionic compounds
7Ionic versus Covalent Bonds
- Chemical bond sharing of electron pair
- Ionic bond highly unequal sharing of electron
pair - Covalent bond approximately equal sharing of
electron pair
- ? bond length amplifies polarity
8BrFbp 20 oC (liquid at room temperature)
- What attractive force is operating?
- What is the nature of association between Br and
F?
DEN 4.0 - 2.8 1.2 not
ionic polar covalent
F Br
4.0
EN
2.8
d-
d
- Attractive force dipole-dipole
- electrostatic (d/d-)
- Bp suggests dipole-dipole attraction weaker than
cation-anion
9H2Obp 100 oC (liquid at room temperature)
- What attractive force is operating?
- What is the nature of association between H and O?
DEN 3.5 - 2.1 1.4 not
ionic polar covalent
2.1
3.5
d-
Attractive force electrostatic
dipole-dipole
hydrogen bonding
d
d
10Hydrogen Bonding
d-
d
d
In general...
- Hydrogen bond acceptor
- Need electron density to attract d
- Bond dipole or single atom
- Concentrated d- (small atoms O, N, or F)
- Negative charge (any anion)
- Must have lone pair(s)
Must be large X high EN F, O, N (rarely
anything else)
11Hydrogen Bonding
- Common attractive force
- Not always dipole-dipole
- Example F- in CH3OH
- Important in biology
- Many O-H, N-H, H2O in organisms
- Example DNA base pairs
- Also influences protein structure
- Hydrogen bond strongest when linear
- Dynamic H-O-H----OH2 3 x 10-12 s lifetime
12Arbp -186 oC (gas at room temperature)
- What attractive force is operating?
- Ionic? No electronegativity difference ? no ions
- Dipole-dipole? No covalent bonds ? no bond
dipoles
- Hydrogen bonding? No hydrogens
- No attractive force? no energy required for
vaporization? - -186 oC gt -273 oC (absolute zero)
- Therefore some attractive force must be present
- Bp is very low so attractive force must be weak
- Student homework figure out what attractive
force exists between two Ar atoms
13Noncovalent Molecular Forces - Part 2
- Lecture Supplement
- Take one handout from the stage
14Summary of Part 1
- Physical properties such as boiling point and
solubility controlled by noncovalent association - Stronger attractive force more energy required
for vaporization higher boiling point - Noncovalent attractive forces caused by
electrostatic attractions - Examples NaCl bp 1413 oC Noncovalent attractive
force cation-anion - BrF bp 20 oC Noncovalent attractive force
dipole-dipole - H2O bp 100 oC Noncovalent attractive
force hydrogen bonding - Hydrogen bond donor usual O-H or N-H bond
- Hydrogen bond acceptor neutral atom with lone
pair and high d- O or N - or
any anion with lone pair - Hydrogen bonds of wide biological importance
protein and DNA structure etc. - Ar bp -186 oC Noncovalent attractive force ?
15Arbp -186 oC (gas at room temperature)
- What attractive force is operating?
- Ionic? Dipole-dipole? Hydrogen bonding?
- No attractive force? no energy required for
vaporization? - bp -186 oC gt -273 oC (absolute zero) so some weak
attractive force must be present
d
d-
- Induced charges
- Momentary electrostatic attraction
- called London force or van der Waals force
- All molecules have electrons so all molecules
influenced by this force
16Strength of van der Waals Forces
What influences strength of van der Waals forces?
Boiling point -269 oC -246 oC -186 oC -152
oC -107 oC -62 oC
Atomic radius 0.32 Ã… 0.69 Ã… 0.97 Ã… 1.10 Ã… 1.30
Ã… 1.45 Ã…
- Polarizability
- Ability to distort electron cloud
- Distortion easy soft Example Rn
- Distortion difficult hard Example He
- Polarizability influenced by...
- Larger atomic radius softer
- Larger electronegativity harder
- Surface area effect?
17Strength of van der Waals Forces
Surface area effect?
- Compare molecules with same polarizability but
different surface areas - Hydrogens small hard
Boiling point -183 oC -88 oC
-42 oC -0.5
oC Surface area 56.6 Ã…2 80.1 Ã…2
102.7 Ã…2 125.2
Ã…2
Maybe this is just a molecular weight effect?
18Strength of van der Waals Forces
Molecular weight effect?
- Compare molecules with same polarizability and
different surface areas, but same molecular
weight (isomers of C5H12)
Boiling point 36 oC
30 oC
9.5 oC Shape Most
elongated
Most spherical
Conclusion higher surface area stronger van
der Waals attraction
19Other Noncovalent Interactions
- Caused by electrostatic attractions
- Ion-dipole
- Bond dipole attracted to anion or cation
- Example Na and Cl- in water
- Cation-pi
- Cation attracted to pi electron cloud
- Explains water solubility of NaCl
- Important in some enzyme-substrate binding
20Other Noncovalent Interactions
- Aromatic stacking
- Overlap of p orbitals of two aromatic rings
- Also called pi stacking
- Noncovalent interactions may have more than one
label - Example Cl- ----- H-OH is hydrogen bonding and
ion-dipole
21Relative Strength of Noncovalent Forces
- Approximate ranking of noncovalent force
strengths useful
Dipole-dipole Hydrogen bonding Ion-dipole Cation-p
i Aromatic stacking
Cation-anion gt Covalent bonds gt
gt Van der Waals
Strongest force
Weakest force
- When more than one force operates, strongest
force dominates - Example
- Evaporation of CH3OH hydrogen bonding harder to
overcome than van der Waals forces
22Application of Noncovalent Interactions
Solubility
oil layer
vinegar layer (water acetic acid)
- Questions
- Why acetic acid dissolves in water?
- Why oil does not dissolve in water?
23Application of Noncovalent Interactions
Solubility
- What causes one substance to dissolve in another?
- Solubility is an equilibrium issue...
ABABABA ABABABA BABABAB ABABABA
Two layers A and B immiscible
Homogeneous A and B dissolve
- Dissolving A interrupts attractive forces in B
- Soluble A/B attractions better than A/A and B/B
attractions - Insoluble A/B attractions not better than A/A
and B/B attractions - Better stronger attractions and/or more
attractions
24Application of Noncovalent Interactions
Solubility
- Many attractive interactions
- Water CH3COOH soluble
- Poor attraction between oil and water
- Strong attraction between water and water
- Water oil insoluble
Like dissolves like