Show:
Questions
Responses
Print
Intermolecular Forces
London Forces
Dipole-Dipole
Hydrogen Bonding
100
Very weak attractive forces because of the momentary unequal distribution of electrons around an atom.
What is the London Dispersion force
100
The electrons of the atom most be this to be intantaneous
What is unsymmetrical distributed.
100
What type of molecules do the atoms have to be
What is polar molecules
100
The hydrogen atoms most commonly bonds with which other atoms
What is Fluorine, Nitrogen, and Oxygen.
200
The attraction between the partial positive end of one dipole and the partial negative end of another dipolar molecule.
What is Dipole-dipole forces
200
Molecules become what for this force to occur
What is momentarily polar
200
how to the atoms bond?
What is negative to the positive end and positive to the negative end
200
Hydrogen bond have what considering boiling points
What is high boiling points
300
Very strong dipole-dipole attractive forces observed exclusively in compounds that have an F, N, or O boned directly to a hydrogen atom
What is Hydrogen bonding
300
London forces are
What is instantaneous
300
are Dipole-dipole forces stronger or weaker than London forces?
What is stronger
300
The best structured hydrogen bond is
What is the water molecule
400
The forces that attract one molecule to another
What is Intermolecular forces
400
Refers to the ease with which the electron cloud around an atom or molecule can be deformed into a dipole.
What is polarizability
400
Highly common dipole-dipole compound
What is HCl
400
Hydrogen bonding also occurs in
What is alcohols, sugars, organic acids, and phenol-type compounds
500
What do the intermolecular forces define?
What is the bonding and forces between molecules.
500
The other name for London forces
What is Van der Waal's force
500
Dipole-dipole are
What is particle bonded
500
What important structure in the human body does hydrogen bonding occure
What is the DNA