Title: Intermolecular Attractions and the Properties of Liquids and Solids
1Chapter 12
- Intermolecular Attractions and the Properties of
Liquids and Solids
2Gases, Liquids and Solids
3Intermolecular Attractions
- Intermolecular forces depend on distance
- Gases have very small attractive forces
- Solids/liquids have larger attractive forces
since molecules are closer to each other - Intermolecular forces - attractions between two
molecules - Intramolecular forces - chemical bonds that hold
molecule together - Intermolecular forces weaker than Intramolecular
forces
4van der Waals Forces
- HCl molecules
- H and Cl atoms held tightly by covalent bond
- Strength of chemical bond keeps molecule intact
- Attractions between HCl molecules are weaker (4
as strong) - Attraction between molecules determine physical
properties - Notice disorientation!
5Dipole-dipole attractions
- HCl(g) - polar molecule with partial charges
- Polar molecules tend to line up so partial
negative and near partial positive - Still net attraction!! (Dipole-dipole!)
- Why weak?
- Charges associated are only partial charges
- Ordinary temperatures (Thermal energy) causes the
dipoles to be somewhat misaligned reducing
effectiveness of attractions
6Hydrogen Bonds
- Important Dipole-dipole attraction when hydrogen
bonds to very small, highly electronegative atom - Think FON (HF, OH, and NH)
- Why Hydrogen bonding?
- Ends of bond contain substantial positive and
negative charges - Charges highly concentrated due to small size
- Positive ends can get very close to negative of
another molecule due to small size
7Hydrogen Bonds in Water
- In Liquid water - molecules experience hydrogen
bonds that continually break and re-form - As water freezes, molecules become locked and
participate in 4 hydrogen bond - Resulting structure has larger volume than liquid
water - Ice cubes float in more dense liquid
8London Dispersion forces
- Nonpolar molecules still have attraction
(although weak) to hold substance together - 1930 - Fritz London, German Scientist
- Nonpolar substances can still have attraction
- Atoms constantly moving
- Motion in one particle affects neighboring
particles - Electrons repel and push away
- At any given moment, the electron density of
molecule can be unsymmetrical - At particular instant, instantaneous dipole!
9Induced Dipoles
- As instantaneous dipole forms, causes electron
density of neighbor to be unsymmetrical - Also forms a dipole (called INDUCED DIPOLE)
- Always causes positive of one to be near negative
of another
10- Very short lived attraction
- Dipoles vanish as they are formed but will form
in other location - Over period of time, there is a net, overall
attraction but relatively weak - Called London dispersion forces or instantaneous
dipole-induced dipole attractions - Distinguished from permanent dipole-dipole
11Strengths of London forces
- Measure using boiling point
- Polarizability
- Measure of the ease the electron cloud is
distorted - As volume of electron cloud increases,
polarizability increases - As atom size increase, higher London forces
- Number
- For molecules containing same elecments, London
forces increase with number of atoms - BPhexane gt BPpropane
- Molecular Shape
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13Intermolecular forces and tightness of packing
affect the properties of liquids and solids
- Compressibility and diffusion depend primarily on
tightness of packing - Most physical properties depend primarily on
strengths of intermolecular attractions - Rate of evaporating depends on surface area,
temperature, and strengths of intermolecular
attractions
14Compressibility and Diffusion
- Compressibility - measure of the ability of
substance to be forced into smaller volume - Incompressible
- Solids and liquids have no empty volume
- Diffusion
- Quick in gases
- Slow in liquids
- Almost nonexistent in solids
15Surface tension
- A property related to the tendency of a liquid to
seek a shape that yields the minimum surface area - The shape with minimum surface area is sphere
- Why?
- Molecules within liquid surrounded by densely
packed molecules - Whereas surface molecules have neighbors beside
and below it - Surface molecules are attracted to fewer neighbors
16- A molecule at the surface has a higher potential
energy than a molecule in the bulk of the liquid - Remember a system becomes more stable when its
potential energy decreases - For a liquid, reducing surface area (reducing the
number molecules at surface area) lowers
potential energy - Lowest energy achieved when liquid has smallest
surface area - Surface tension of a liquid is proportional to
energy needed to expand surface area
17Surface tension every day
- Water in rim
- Invisible Skin
- Soap, Pepper and Water
18Wetting of surface by a liquid
- Wetting - spreading of liquid across a surface to
form a thin film - To occur, the intermolecular attractive forces
between the liquid and the surface must be of
about the same strength as forces within liquid
itself - Think glass coated
- SURFACTANTS - drastically lower the surface
tension of water - Water is wetter
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20Viscosity
- Viscosity - resistance to a change in form of a
liquid - Internal friction of material
- Factors
- Temperature (Temp decreases viscosity increases)
- Molecular size
- Tangling
- Attractions
- Acetone vs. Ethlyene glycol
21Evaporation and sublimation
- Important factor Change of State!
- Evaporation - for liquid, tendency to undergo
change to gas - Sublimation - solid to gas change of state
22Evaporation and cooling
- Evaporation causes cooling effect
- Rate of evaporation per unit of surface area of a
given liquid is greater at a higher temperature - The weaker the intermolecular attractive forces,
the faster the rate of evaporation at a given
temperature
23- Change of state - substance is transformed from
one physical state to another - Physical equilibrium similar to chemical
equilibrium - Evaporation and condensation (change of vapor to
liquid) cause equilibrium - Evaporation increases number of molecules in
vapor - Condensation decreases number of molecules in
vapor - Melting Point - solid to liquid
24Vapor Pressure
- Vapor pressure - the pressure that molecules
exert when a liquid evaporates - Equilibrium vapor pressure
- Occurs in closed container
- Rates of evaporation and condensation are equal
- Concentrations of molecules in vapor remains
constant and the vapor exerts constant pressure
25Factors that affect Vapor Pressure
- VP is solely function of evaporation per unit
area of liquids surface - If rate large
- Large conc of molecules in vapor state necessary
for eq. - Also, VP is high, and evaporation rate high
- As temp increases, rate and VP increase
- Can use VP as indication of relative strengths of
attractive forces in liquids
26Boiling Point
- How would you check for boiling?
- Increasing heat just increases amt of bubbles
- Any pure liquid remains at constant temperature
at boiling point - Why do liquids boil?
- Bubbles contain vapor!!
- As liquid evaporates, pressure pushes
- Opposing force is pressure of atmosphere
- The temp at which vp of liquid is equal to
prevailing atmospheric pressure
27- Why does water boil at lower temp in Denver than
NY? - Normal boiling point - boiling point of liquid at
1 atm - Relates to intermolecular attractions
- When attractive forces are strong, the liquid has
low vp and therefore, must be heated to higher
temp - High boiling points result from strong
intermolecular attractions
28Heating and cooling curves
- Heating Curve Application
- Heat at constant rate
- Diagram
29Le Châteliers Principle
- When a dynamic equilibrium in a system is upset
by a disturbance, the system responds in a
direction that tends to counteract the
disturbance and, if possible, restore equilibrium - Heat Liquid ? vapor
- Position of equilibrium
30Phase Diagrams
- Graphical representation of phase equilibria
- Triple point - all three phases exist
- Critical point
31Phase Diagrams for Water