Intramolecular Forces & Intermolecular Forces
Polar Bonds (2)
Usually asymmetrical structures; all ionic compounds are polar; unequal sharing between 2 atoms (2)
Non-polar Bonds (2)
Usually symmetrical; equal sharing between 2 atoms that have the same electronegativity (2)
Coulomb's Law
force of attraction between charged particles is directly porportional to the product of the charges and inversly porportional to the distance between them
Non polar (1)
no shift (pull) in electrons; no net dipole - 0.5 and lower (1)
Linear
non-polar/polar
Lone pair
A pair of electrons that are not being shared between elements.
Vapor Pressure
After the substance is heated, a vapor forms, or a gas that builds up pressure.
Dipole-Dipole (2)
Attraction between the positive end of one molecule and the negative end of another molecule. (2)
Dipole-Dipole (1)
Between polar molecules, attractive force between polar molecules positive attracts negative. (1)
Hydrogen Bonding (1)
Hydrogen has a very low electronegitivity so it bonds with a high electronegitivity such as F, O or N. What type of bond does this form? (1)
Ionic
Metals to non metals, high melting points, high boiling points, transfer electrons.
Molecular (covalent)
Non metals, electrons are shared between two atoms, low melting and boiling points.
Tetrahedral
Non-polar/ Polar
Trigonal Planar
Non-polar; BF₃
Bent
Polar; H₂O
Trigonal Pyramidal
Polar; NH₃
Hydrogen Bonds (2)
Strongest; highest melting point; hydrogen bond between either Oxygen, Nitrogen or Fluorine. (2)
London Dispersion
Temporary bonding, only happnes when molecules get close enough, this will always be a posibility of the intermolecular forces.
Polar (1)
a shift in electrons; has a net dipole - 0.5 to 1.7 (1)
Intermolecular
between two different molecules; are what hold molecular materials together in a liquid or solid state. intermolecular bonds are broken when energy (heat) is greater than the intermolecular bond. (this is why materials have specific melting and freezing points.)
Intramolecular
bond within molecule; force that holds the atoms or ions together in a compound. 1. metallic 2. ionic 3. covalent stronger than intermolecular, and works deeper into the compound.
Metallic Bonding
defined as the force of attraction between metal atoms due to pulling of their valence electrons to form a delocalized sea of electrons