Shape of my Heart -- Sting
Holding On -- Creature Canyon
Hard To Explain -- The Strokes
F.C.P.R.E.M.I.X -- The Fall of Troy
MORE - Liily
100

We can never be EDGs

What are trig pyramidal and bent geometries?
100

Nonpolar molecules rely on this to interact.


What are dispersion forces?


100

Br2 has a higher boiling point than F2 because of these.

What are electrons?

What are dispersion forces?

100

Benzene is likely to be this.

What is water insoluble?

100

This process releases energy

What is exothermic

200

We are the two important things to figure out when identifying molecular geometries

What are total domains and lone pairs?

200
Dipole-dipole forces are irrelevant to this question.

What is "rank the molecules based on their polarizability"?

200

A substance has a drastically higher viscosity than another despite having fewer electrons because of this.

What is a larger surface area?

What is dipole-dipole?

What is h-bonding?

200

Adding an -OH to hexane should do this.

What is increasing the solubility?


200

The reaction looks like is has stopped.

What is reaching equilibrium?

300

Trigonal pyramidal and bent molecules are generally polar because of this.

What is asymmetry?

300

Molecules going faster (or having more kinetic energy) makes this more difficult.

What are molecules interacting with one another?


300

The reason SbH3's boiling point is fairly close to NH3's boiling point.

What are stronger dispersion forces?

300

This dissolution process is generally endothermic.

(explain why)


What is the dissolution of solids into a liquid?

300

Explain why CF2Cl2 is polar.

This is an asymmetrical molecule. Despite it looking possibly symmetrical, the tetra geometry makes it not, and the different bonds cause overall polarity


400

This geometry is lovely for dispersion forces.

What is linear/trigonal planar/bent (planar geometries)?

400

We do this when drawing:

a. dispersion forces

b. Dipole dipole forces

c. Hbonding forces

What is drawing arbitrary partial charges?

What is lining up dipoles head to tail?

What is drawing dashed lines between viable hydrogens and viable N,O,or Fs

400

Doing this will cause the volatility of CH3CH2CH2OH to increase.

What is replacing the -OH group with a -CH3 (or something similar)?

400
Two substances that mix better at higher temperatures imply this.

What are weaker mixed interactions?

400

Explain why CS2 would have a higher boiling point than CF2Cl2

What must be surface area?

500

Why is the linear geometry of CO2 and the bent geometry of H2O so important

If the geometries were flipped, IMFs of the two molecules would be completely different.

500

A nonpolar molecule can interact with H2O by these forces.

What is dispersion and MAYBE H-bonding?

(think CO2)

500

Sugar has a melting point of 186 oC because of this.

What is a large amount of electrons, a big surface area, strong dipole-dipole forces, and a large capacity for hydrogen bonding?

500

HO-CH2-CH2-OH is a highly water-soluble molecule. Make a modification to reduce water solubility and increase benzene (C6H6) solubility.

What is removing an OH for a CH3?

500

I am the IMFs found in C2H2F2

What are dispersion for sure and maybe dipole dipole


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