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Chem 1011 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 February 1, 2010 – Lecture 11 ___________________________________ 11.3 Intermolecular Forces: The Forces That Hold Condensed Phases Together – Dispersion Force – Dipole-Dipole Force – Hydrogen Bonding – Ion Dipole Force Dr. L. Dawe ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 11.2 Solids, Liquids, and Gases: A Molecular Comparison – Changes between phases Chem 1011 Lecture 11 Winter 2010 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Solids, Liquids, and Gases: A Molecular Comparison ___________________________________ ___________________________________ of r th la n g cu re le St mo s r n te o In cti a ? ttr ow A Fl it le? ill b W ssi e pr om C State Shape Volume Solid fixed fixed Liquid indefinite fixed Gas indefinite indefinite Density high high low No No No Yes Yes Yes very strong intermediate weak • fixed = keeps shape when placed in a container • indefinite = takes the shape of the container Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Solids, Liquids, and Gases: A Molecular Comparison ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 1 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Changes between phases Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Phase Change State Change Example Melting (fusion) solid liquid Ice cube melting Freezing (solidification) liquid solid Water freezing Vaporization liquid gas Water boiling Condensation gas liquid Dew forming on grass Sublimation solid gas Dry ice: CO2(s) → CO2(g) ___________________________________ Sublimation gas solid I2(g) → I2(s) ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Winter 2010 Changes between phases ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Intermolecular Forces: The Forces That Hold Condensed Phases Together Intramolecular Forces: attraction within a molecule. A covalent bond is an example of an intramolecular force. Intermolecular Forces: an attraction between molecules. – – Responsible for condenses phases (solids and liquids). Intermolecular forces explain many properties of liquids. (a) Molecules at the surface interact with other surface molecules and with molecules directly below the surface. (b) Molecules in the interior experience intermolecular interactions with neighboring molecules in all directions. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 2 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Intermolecular Forces: The Forces That Hold Condensed Phases Together Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ There are four primary types of intermolecular forces: ___________________________________ 1. (London) Dispersion Forces 2. Dipole-Dipole Forces (van der Waal's Forces) 3. Hydrogen Bonding 4. Ion-Dipole Force ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Recall: polarizability: the ease with which a particle’s electron cloud can be distorted. Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force Dispersion forces: Intermolecular forces associated with instantaneous and induced dipoles. – Electron location is expressed in terms of probabilities only – For non-polar molecules it is most probable that the electrons will be evenly distributed in the atomic or molecular orbitals. – It is possible for the electrons in one molecule to flicker into an arrangement that results in partial positive (δ+) and partial negative (δ-) charges. – When this occurs the molecules acquire an instantaneous (it lasts less than 10-16 seconds!) dipole. – A molecule that has acquired an instantaneous dipole can then induce a dipole in another molecule. Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ a) Normal Condition: A non-polar molecule has a symmetrical charge distribution b) Instantaneous Condition: A displacement of the electronic charge produces an instantaneous dipole with a charge separation represented as δ+ and δ-. c) Induced Dipole: The instantaneous dipole on the left induces a charge separation in the molecule on the right. The result is a dipole-dipole interaction. The two dipoles, in the two molecules, will attract each other, and the result is that the potential energy of the two is lowered. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 3 Chem 1011 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force • • Dispersion forces are present in both polar and non-polar molecules, however, it is the main type of intermolecular force between non-polar molecules. There are two factors that effect the magnitude of dispersion forces: Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 1. Number of electrons: Larger molecules with more electrons more easily undergo vibrations that lead to uneven distribution of charge. Molecules with more electrons will have stronger dispersion forces. Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force • There are two factors that effect the magnitude of dispersion forces: 2. Surface area: Molecules with a larger surface area offer a greater opportunity for a molecule to induce a dipole in a nearby molecule. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Spherical molecules with the same number of electrons as more branched molecules will have weaker dispersion forces. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 4 Chem 1011 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dispersion Force • Example: F2 has 18 electrons and Cl2 has 34 electrons. The dispersion forces for Cl2 are stronger than those of F2. • Example: Cl2 and C4H10 each have 34 electrons. C4H10 has a larger, more complex shape therefore it has stronger dispersion forces than Cl2. • When a substance melts or boils, the intermolecular forces are overcome. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ • Molecules with greater dispersion forces will have higher boiling points because more energy is required to overcome the attraction between molecules. Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dipole-Dipole Force Dipole-Dipole Forces: intermolecular attractions associated with molecules with permanent dipoles. • Recall that the bond dipoles for molecules do not always cancel. When the bond dipoles do not cancel the resulting molecule is polar (it has a permanent dipole). • This leads to polar molecules trying to line up with the positive of one dipole directed toward the negative end of neighbouring dipoles. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 5 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dipole-Dipole Force Dipole-dipole forces add to dispersion forces (which are present for all molecules). Dipole-dipole forces also affect physical properties such as melting and boiling point. Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Dipole-Dipole Force NO is a polar molecule, hence it has both dispersion forces and dipole-dipole forces present. It has a higher boiling point than O2(l) or N2(l) because extra energy is required to overcome the dipole-dipole interactions. Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Intermolecular Forces Problem: Which would you expect to have the higher boiling point? (a) C4H10 or (CH3)2CO (b) C3H8, CO2, CH3CN ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Example: The boiling point of N2(l) is -195.81 oC. The boiling point of O2(l) is -182.96 oC. If only dispersion forces are considered, one would predict the boiling point of NO(l) to be in between that of O2(l) and N2(l) . The actual boiling point of NO(l) is -151.76 oC, much higher than either that of O2(l) or N2(l) . Chem 1011 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Dipole-dipole forces involve the displacement of electrons in bonds, rather than the displacement of all the electrons in a molecule, as in dispersion forces. Chem 1011 Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 6 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Lecture 11 Problem: Which would you expect to have the higher boiling point? (a) C4H10 or (CH3)2CO (b) C3H8, CO2, CH3CN 7 Chem 1011 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding Hydrogen Bonding: an intermolecular force of attraction in which an H-atom covalently bonded to one highly electronegative atom is simultaneously attracted to another highly electronegative atom of the same or a nearby molecule. – The only atoms that are electronegative enough to participate in hydrogen bonding are fluorine, nitrogen and oxygen. – Hydrogen bonding, like dispersion forces and dipole-dipole forces, also affects physical properties, like melting and boiling points. – Notice the anomalies in the following graph of boiling points for hydrides of Groups 4A, 5A, 6A and 7A. Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ The values for NH3, H2O and HF are unusually high compared to those of other member of their groups! Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding • Consider the molecule HF as our example. • Fluorine is highly electronegative, and pulls the bonding pair of electrons closer to itself, leaving the hydrogen nucleus unshielded with a partial positive charge. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ • The hydrogen nucleus is then attracted to the lone pair of electrons on another highly electronegative atom. • Recall that the other highly electronegative atom will have a partial negative charge, acquired by attracting electrons involved in its molecular bonds. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 8 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding • ___________________________________ ___________________________________ The result for gaseous HF is that it often forms cyclic (HF)6. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Covalent Bond ___________________________________ Hydrogen Bond ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding ___________________________________ ___________________________________ N-H Bond Example: ___________________________________ • Urea is CO(NH2)2 and it undergoes extensive hydrogen bonding due to its four hydrogen atoms bonded directly to nitrogen, and also H-bonded to both nitrogen and oxygen. Several of these interaction are depicted below. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 9 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ O-H Bond Example: ___________________________________ • In liquid H2O each hydrogen atom is bonded to at least four other H2O molecules. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding ___________________________________ ___________________________________ O-H Bond Example: ___________________________________ • In liquid H2O each hydrogen atom is bonded to at least four other H2O molecules. – A few of these bonds are illustrated below. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ The molecules can still move around because they have enough kinetic energy to break the hydrogen bonds, which then reform with another H2O molecule. Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Hydrogen Bonding ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ • Hydrogen bonding in H2O also explains why ice floats! ___________________________________ • To float a solid must be less dense than the liquid. ___________________________________ • In the liquid there is enough kinetic energy to overcome some of the hydrogen bonds, but in the solid the kinetic energy is no longer sufficient to overcome the hydrogen bonds. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ This results in the molecules being organized into a crystalline arrangement, which is less dense than the arrangement of the H2O molecules in the liquid. ___________________________________ 10 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Comparing Melting and Boiling Points Melting/Boiling Point Compound Highest 1. Ionic 3. Molecular (Dipole-Dipole + Dispersion Forces) Chem 1011 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 2. Molecular (H-Bonding + Dipole-Dipole + Dispersion Forces) Lowest Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 4. Molecular (Dispersion Forces Only) Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Ion Dipole Force ___________________________________ ___________________________________ • In a mixture, ions from an ionic compound are attracted to the dipole of polar molecules. ___________________________________ • The strength of the ion–dipole attraction is one of the main factors that determines the solubility of ionic compounds in water. ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Ion Dipole Force ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ An ionic crystal dissolving in water. Clustering of water dipoles around the surface of the ionic crystal and the formation of hydrated ions in solution are the key factors in the dissolving process. 11 Chem 1011 Chem 1011 Dr. L. Dawe Dr. L. Dawe Winter 2010 Looking Ahead February 3, 2010 – Lecture 12 11.5 Vaporization and Vapor Pressure – The Process of Vaporization – The Energetics of Vaporization – Vapor Pressure and Dynamic Equilibrium – The Critical Point: The Transition to an Unusual Phase of Matter 11.6 Sublimation and Fusion – Sublimation – Fusion – Energetics of Melting and Freezing Lecture 11 ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 12