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Strength of Forces Between Particles

Strength of Forces Between Particles

Assessment

Presentation

Chemistry

11th - 12th Grade

Hard

Created by

Joseph Anderson

FREE Resource

12 Slides • 4 Questions

1

Forces of Attraction Chapter 12 Section 2

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2

Intramolecular Forces

The attractive forces that hold particles together in ionic, covalent, and metallics bonds are called intramolecular forces.

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3

Intermolecular Forces

Attractive forces between molecules cause some materials to be solids, some to be liquids, and some to be gases at the same temperature.

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4

Multiple Choice

Which are stronger, intramolecular forces or intermolecular forces?

1

intramolecular forces

2

intermolecular forces

5

Intermolecular Forces cont.

Dispersion forces are weak forces that result from temporary shifts in density of electrons in electron clouds.

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6

7

Multiple Choice

Dispersion forces are

1

are weak forces that result from a temporary shift of electrons in electron clouds.

2

are forces of attraction between permanent charged regions between molecules.

3

an attraction between molecules containing a hydrogen atom bonded to a highly electronegative atom.

8

Intermolecular Forces cont.

Dipole-dipole forces are attractions between oppositely charged regions of polar molecules.

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9

10

Multiple Choice

Dipole-dipole forces are

1

are weak forces that result from a temporary shift of electrons in electron clouds.

2

are forces of attraction between permanent charged regions between molecules.

3

an attraction between molecules containing a hydrogen atom bonded to a highly electronegative atom.

11

Intermolecular Forces cont.

Hydrogen bonds are special dipole-dipole attractions that occur between molecules that contain a hydrogen atom bonded to a small, highly electronegative atom with at least one lone pair of electrons, typically fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen.

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12

13

Multiple Choice

Hydrogen bonds are

1

are weak forces that result from a temporary shift of electrons in electron clouds.

2

are forces of attraction between permanent charged regions between molecules.

3

an attraction between molecules containing a hydrogen atom bonded to a highly electronegative atom.

14

Intermolecular Forces cont.

  • Hydrogen bonds explain why water is a liquid at room temperature while compounds of comparable mass are gases.

  • Methane is nonpolar, so relatively weak dispersion forces holding the molecule together.

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15

Intermolecular Forces cont.

  • Ammonia and Water both form hydrogen bonds but oxygen is more electronegative than nitrogen making O-H bonds more polar and thus stronger

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16

End

Forces of Attraction Chapter 12 Section 2

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