Polarity and Intermolecular Forces
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Transcript Polarity and Intermolecular Forces
Comparing Acid Strengths by
Comparing Structures
Look at the stability of the conjugate
base. The more stable the conjugate
base, the stronger its acid.
Electronegativity
Size/polarizability
Resonance Stabilization
Induction
Hybrid orbital containing electrons
Which H is more acidic?
Where does the equilibrium lie?
O
O
+
OH
Cl
Cl Cl
O
O
O
-
O-
+
Cl
Cl Cl
OH
Does an Acid-Base Reaction
Occur? Write the products.
(CH3)3N + NH2-
Bond Polarity - Part I
A bond is polar when the charge is not
equally shared between the two atoms.
The more electronegative atom will
have a partial negative charge (δ-).
The arrow
shows the
dipole
moment.
Here we
show
partial
charges.
Bond Polarity - Part II
A polar bond has a dipole moment μ:
μ(in debyes) = 4.8 δ d
δ is the charge at either end of the
dipole
d is the bond length in angstroms
(charge separation) (1Å=10-10m)
dipole
moment, μ
bond length, d
Bond Polarity - Part II
μ(in D) = 4.8 δ d
The dipole moment μ gives a
quantitative measure of the polarity
of a bond.
C=O (2.4D) is more polar than C-O (0.86 D)
Bond Dipole Moments from
Wade, 7th ed (Table 2-1)
C-O
0.86D
C-N
0.22D
C-F
1.51D
C=O
2.4D
C≡N
3.6D
C - Cl
1.56D
H-O
1.53D
H-N
1.31D
C - Br
1.48D
H-C
0.3D
C-I
1.29D
Bond Polarity - Part II
μ(in D) = 4.8 δ d
Knowing μ and d allows the charge
separation δ to be calculated.
C=O has a dipole moment of 2.4D and a
bond length of 1.21Å.
δ = 2.4/(4.8x1.21)= 0.41
C-O has a dipole moment of 0.86D and a
bond length of 1.43Å.
δ = 0.86/(4.8x1.43)= 0.13
Molecular Polarity
The polarity (or dipole moment) of a
molecule is the vector sum of the dipole
moment for each bond in the molecule.
A molecule with a significant dipole moment is
polar.
A molecule with little or no dipole moment is
considered nonpolar.
Molecular Polarity
The dipole moment of a molecule
can be measured.
The dipole moments of the individual
bonds can then be estimated.
Lone pairs contribute to the dipole
moments.
Intermolecular Forces
arise from the charged nature of
the subatomic particles (electrons
and protons).
are responsible for the
cohesiveness of materials.
are what determine physical
properties of pure substances such
as melting point, boiling point,
vapor pressure, and solubility.
Intermolecular Forces
Substances that are gases at room
temperature have weak intermolecular
forces.
Substances that are condensed
(liquids or solids) at room temperature
have much stronger intermolecular
forces.
If intermolecular forces did not exist,
all substances would be gases, even at
extremely low temperatures.
Intermolecular Forces
Dipole-dipole
generally attractive
Hydrogen bonding
a special category of very strong dipole-dipole
force that involves the attraction between an
electropositive H atom and nonbonding
electrons on an electronegative atom (usually
N, O, F, or Cl)
London dispersion force
instantaneous dipole-induced dipole
increases with increasing surface area of the
molecule
present in all molecules
Intermolecular Forces
Which will have the higher boiling point?
or
Intermolecular Forces
Why does CCl4 have the higher boiling
point?
chloroform, CHCl3 (μ = 1.0D)
or
carbon tetrachloride, CCl4 (μ = 0)
bp CHCl3 = 62°C
bp CCl4 = 77°C
Intermolecular Forces and
Solubility
“Like dissolves like.”
Polar substances dissolve in polar
solvents.
Nonpolar substances dissolve in
nonpolar solvents.
The other pairings (polar
substance/nonpolar solvent and
nonpolar substance / polar solvent) will
not dissolve.
Intermolecular Forces and
Solubility
For one substance to dissolve in another,
there must be an attraction similar in
magnitude to the forces holding the solvent
together.
In water, H bonding holds the molecules of
water together pretty tightly.
For a substance to dissolve in water, there
must be an attraction between the substance
and water that is close in magnitude to those H
bonds.
Ions, alcohols, and ethers all dissolve in
water…can you show why?
Intermolecular Forces and
Solubility
Carbon tetrachloride does NOT
dissolve in water.
Water is held together by H bonds, a
strong intermolecular interaction.
Carbon tetrachloride is nonpolar.
The only force of attraction between
CCl4 and H2O is dispersion, and that is
not strong enough to push apart the Hbonded water molecules.
Intermolecular Forces
Which are soluble in water and why?
Phosphatidyl choline – a lipid
found in cell membranes
http://www.agen.ufl.edu/~chyn/age2062/lect/lect_06/4_18.GIF
Intermolecular Forces and
the Cell Membrane
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UL
R79TiUj80&feature=related