Chemistry (Chang), 9th Edition

Chapter 11: Intermolecular Forces and Liquids and Solids

Chapter Summary

1. All substances exist in one of three states: gas, liquid, or solid. The major difference between the condensed state and the gaseous state is the distance separating molecules.

2. Intermolecular forces act between molecules or between molecules and ions. Generally, these attractive forces are much weaker than bonding forces.

3. Dipole-dipole forces and ion-dipole forces attract molecules with dipole moments to other polar molecules or ions.

4. Dispersion forces are the result of temporary dipole moments induced in ordinarily nonpolar molecules. The extent to which a dipole moment can be induced in a molecule is called its polarizability. The term “van der Waals forces” refers to dipole-dipole, dipole-induced dipole, and dispersion forces.

5. Hydrogen bonding is a relatively strong dipole-dipole interaction between a polar bond containing a hydrogen atom and an electronegative O, N, or F atom. Hydrogen bonds between water molecules are particularly strong.

6. Liquids tend to assume a geometry that minimizes surface area. Surface tension is the energy needed to expand a liquid surface area; strong intermolecular forces lead to greater surface tension.

7. Viscosity is a measure of the resistance of a liquid to flow; it decreases with increasing temperature.

8. Water molecules in the solid state form a three-dimensional network in which each oxygen atom is covalently bonded to two hydrogen atoms and is hydrogen-bonded to two hydrogen atoms. This unique structure accounts for the fact that ice is less dense than liquid water, a property that allows life to survive under the ice in ponds and lakes in cold climates.

9. Water is also ideally suited for its ecological role by its high specific heat, another property imparted by its strong hydrogen bonding. Large bodies of water are able to moderate Earth’s climate by giving off and absorbing substantial amounts of heat with only small changes in the water temperature.

10. All solids are either crystalline (with a regular structure of atoms, ions, or molecules) or amorphous (without a regular structure). Glass is an example of an amorphous solid.

11. The basic structural unit of a crystalline solid is the unit cell, which is repeated to form a three-dimensional crystal lattice. X-ray diffraction has provided much of our knowledge about crystal structure.

12. The four types of crystals and the forces that hold their particles together are ionic crystals, held together by ionic bonding; covalent crystals, covalent bonding; molecular crystals, van der Waals forces and/or hydrogen bonding; and metallic crystals, metallic bonding.

13. A liquid in a closed vessel eventually establishes a dynamic equilibrium between evaporation and condensation. The vapor pressure over the liquid under these conditions is the equilibrium vapor pressure, which is often referred to simply as “vapor pressure.”

14. At the boiling point, the vapor pressure of a liquid equals the external pressure. The molar heat of vaporization of a liquid is the energy required to vaporize one mole of the liquid. It can be determined by measuring the vapor pressure of the liquid as a function of temperature and using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation [Equation (11.2)]. The molar heat of fusion of a solid is the energy required to melt one mole of the solid.

15. For every substance there is a temperature, called the critical temperature, above which its gas phase cannot be made to liquefy.

16. The relationships among the phases of a single substance are illustrated by a phase diagram, in which each region represents a pure phase and the boundaries between the regions show the temperatures and pressures at which the two phases are in equilibrium. At the triple point, all three phases are in equilibrium.

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