condensed phases and intermolecular forces. fundamentals how do particle diagrams of liquids &...

36
Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces

Upload: amberly-short

Post on 06-Jan-2018

229 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Describe the relative positions and motions of particles in each of the 3 phases.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Condensed Phases and

Intermolecular Forces

Page 2: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Fundamentals

How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Page 3: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Describe the relative positions and motions of particles in each of the 3 phases.

Page 4: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

The Question

Why do some substances exist as gases at room temperature, some as liquids, and some as solids?

Page 5: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

2 kinds of forces

Part of the answer has to do with the forces between separate molecules.

There are 2 broad categories of forces you need to be aware of.

Page 6: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intramolecular ForcesIntramolecular forces = attractive

forces that hold particles together in ionic, covalent, or metallic bonds.

Intra means “within.”

Intramolecular forces = bonding forces.

Page 7: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular Forces

Inter means “between” or “among.”Intermolecular forces are forces

between molecules.Intermolecular forces are weaker than

intramolecular forces.

There are 3 types of intermolecular forces.

Page 8: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular forces determine phase.Intermolecular forces determine phase.

“Competition” between strength of intermolecular forces and kinetic energy determines phase.

If intermolecular forces are strong, substance will be a solid or liquid at room temperature. Particles want to clump together.

If intermolecular forces are weak, substance will be a gas at room temperature. Particles spread apart.

Page 9: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

It’s a balancing act!

Intermolecular Forces

Kinetic Energy

This substance = a gas at room temperature.

Page 10: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular Forces vs. Kinetic Energy

Intermolecular Forces

Kinetic Energy

This substance = a condensed phase.

Page 11: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Why Temperature Changes Affect Phase

Since temperature is a measure of avg kinetic energy, changing temperature changes phase.

Changing temperature changes the average kinetic energy

Page 12: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Changing the temperature

Intermolecular Intermolecular ForcesForces

KineticEnergy

Page 13: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular Forces

A few % the strength of the intramolecular or bonding forces

Account for phase at room temperature.Account for phase at room temperature.

Strong intermolecular forces condensed phase.

Weak intermolecular forces gas phase

Page 14: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular Forces & Phase

Strong Intermolecular Forces = SolidsSolids have high melting points, high

boiling points.

Weak Intermolecular Forces = GasesGases have low melting points, low boiling

points.

Page 15: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

3 Types of intermolecular forces

Dispersion ForcesDispersion Forces: These are the weakest. Occur between all molecules but are most important for nonpolar molecules.

Dipole-dipole forcesDipole-dipole forces: These are intermediate. Occur between polar molecules.

Hydrogen bondsHydrogen bonds: These are the strongest. Occur between molecules containing an H-F, H-O, or H-N bond.

Page 16: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Dispersion Forces

Instantaneous and momentary; fluctuating. Results from motion of electrons. Avg = fig. a.

If the charge cloud is not symmetrical it will induceinduce an asymmetry in its neighbor’s charge cloud!

Page 17: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Nonpolar molecules

NonNonpolar means nono poles. Can’t tell one end of the molecule from the other.

Symmetrical.

Page 18: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Examples of Nonpolar Molecules

Monatomic gas molecules: He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn

Diatomics where both atoms are the same element: H2, N2, O2, Cl2, F2, I2, Br2

Larger molecules if they are very symmetrical molecules: CH4, C2H6, C3H8

Page 19: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Dispersion Forces and Size

Dispersion forces increase with the size of the molecule.

The larger the electron cloud, the greater the fluctuations in charge can be.

Rn > Xe > Kr > Ar > Ne > HeI2 > Br2 > Cl2 > F2

C8H18 > C5H12 > C3H8 > CH4

Page 20: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Boiling point of N2 is 77 K. Intermolec-ular forces are very weak dispersion forces.

Page 21: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Dipole-dipole Forces & Polar Molecules

Molecule shows permanent separation of charge. It has poles – one end is somewhat negative & one end is somewhat positive.

Page 22: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Polar means the molecule has poles, +’ve & -’ve. The geometry and the charge distribution are not symmetrical.

Polar Molecules

Source: http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/602/616516/Media_Assets/Chapter10/Text_Images/FG10_01-01UN.JPG

Page 23: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

What do you know about charge?

Opposites Attract!

This time, the situation is permanent!

Examples: HI, CH3Cl

Page 24: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Hydrogen Bonding

Occurs between molecules containing an H-F, H-O, or H-N bond. (FON!!!)

Page 25: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Hydrogen Bonding

Hydrogen bonding is the extreme case of dipole-dipole bonding.

F, O, and N are all small and electronegativeelectronegative. They really attract electrons. H has only 1 electron, so if it’s spending time somewhere else, the proton is almost “naked.”

The H end is always positive and the F, O, or N is always negative.

Page 26: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

The bonding electrons spend more time by the oxygen atom than by the hydrogen atoms.

Oxygen end – bit negative

Hydrogens – bit positive Source: http://ghs.gresham.k12.or.us/science/ps/sci/ibbio/chem/notes/chpt2/water.gif

Page 27: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Hydrogen Bonding in Water

Source: http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://food.oregonstate.edu/images/learni/w6.jpg&imgrefurl=http://food.oregonstate.edu/learn/water.html&h=231&w=216&sz=19&tbnid=niAcgd-QCTMJ:&tbnh=103&tbnw=96&hl=en&start=7&prev=/images?q=hydrogen+bonding+in%

Source: http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://food.oregonstate.edu/images/learni/w6.jpg&imgrefurl=http://food.oregonstate.edu/learn/water.html&h=231&w=216&sz=19&tbnid=niAcgd-QCTMJ:&tbnh=103&tbnw=96&hl=en&start=7&prev=/images?q=hydrogen+bonding+in%

Page 28: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Hydrogen bonding is the strongest intermolecular force and influences the physical properties of the substance a great deal.

Page 29: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?
Page 30: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Result of Hydrogen Bonding

Increased Boiling Point over predicted value based on molecular size & comparison with similar compounds.

Page 31: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Strength of Hydrogen Bonding

Fluorine is the most electronegative element, so H-F bonds are the most polar and exhibit the strongest hydrogen bonding.

H-F > H-O > H-N

Page 32: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular Forces vs.

Physical Properties If intermolecular forces increase, Boiling point Melting point Heat of Fusion Heat of Vaporization Evaporation Rate Vapor Pressure

Page 33: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Intermolecular Forces vs. Temperature

Intermolecular forces become more important as the temperature is lowered.

EX: Low temperature – low evaporation rate High temperature – high evaporation rate

Page 34: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

Indicate the kind of intermolecular forces for each molecule below.NH3ArN2HClHFNeO2HBrCH3NH2

• Hydrogen bonding• Dispersion forces• Dispersion forces• Dipole-dipole forces• Hydrogen bonding• Dispersion• Dispersion• Dipole-dipole• Hydrogen bonding

Page 35: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

ForcesForces

Page 36: Condensed Phases and Intermolecular Forces. Fundamentals How do particle diagrams of liquids & solids compare to those of gases?

ForcesForces

INTERMOLECULARINTERMOLECULAR INTRAMOLECULARINTRAMOLECULAR

DispersionDispersion

Dipole-DipoleDipole-Dipole

Hydrogen BondingHydrogen Bonding

CovalentCovalent

IonicIonic

MetallicMetallic