IMFs Flashcards

0
Q

What are intermolecular forces?

A

The attractions between molecules are not nearly as strong as the intermolecular attractions that hold compounds together; these intermolecular attractions are, however, strong enough to control physical properties, such as boiling and melting points, vapor pressures, and viscosities; referred to as van der Waals forces

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1
Q

What’s the importance of states of matter in bonding?

A

The fundamental difference between states of matter is the distance between particles.

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2
Q

What are the three van der Waals forces?

A

dipole-dipole interactions
hydrogen bonding
London dispersion forces

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3
Q

What are london dispersion forces?

A

attractions between an instantaneous dipole and an induced dipole

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4
Q

What are the characteristics of dispersion forces?

A

Weak, short lived
exerted by non polar molecules
Electrons are not evenly distributed at all times (instantaneous dipole)
Lasts longer at low temperature
Eventually long enough to make liquidsMore electrons, more polarizable
Bigger molecules, higher melting and boiling points

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5
Q

What are Dipole-dipole interactions?

A

molecules that are permanent dipoles are attracted to each other

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6
Q

What’s Hydrogen Bonding?

A

The dipole-dipole interactions experienced when Hydrogen is bonded to Nitrogen, Oxygen, or F are unusually strong.

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7
Q

What’s viscosity?

A

resistance of a liquid to flow

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8
Q

What are the physical properties of strong IMFs

A

High melting/freezing point
High boiling point
Low Vapor pressure

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9
Q

Define heat of fusion

A

the energy required to change a solid at its melting point to a liquid

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10
Q

Define heat of vaporization

A

the energy required to change a liquid at its boiling point to a gas

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11
Q

Define the heat of sublimation

A

energy required to change a solid directly to a gas

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12
Q

define boiling point

A

the temperature at which its vapor pressure equls atmospheric pressure

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13
Q

define normal boiling point

A

the temperature at which its vapor pressure is at 760 torr or 1 atm

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14
Q

define solutions

A

homogenous mixtures of two or more pure substances

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15
Q

What are solvates?

A

as a solution forms, the solvent pulls solute particles apart and surrounds, or solvates, them

16
Q

How do you find Mass Percentage?

A

mass of A in solution / total mass of solution x 100

17
Q

How do you find the mole fraction?

A

X = moles of A / total moles of all components

18
Q

Define Molarity

A

M = moles of solute / liters of solution

19
Q

define molality

A

m = moles of solute / kilograms of solvent

20
Q

Define hypertonic

A

if the solute concentration outside the cell is greater than that inside the cell

21
Q

Define hypotonic

A

If the solute concentration outside the cell is less than that inside the cell

22
Q

what’s the difference between hydrophilic and hydrophobic?

A

water-loving vs. water-hating