CHEM 1300 Lecture Notes - Lecture 24: Specific Volume, Nonane, Surface Tension

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Intermolecular forces range in energy from less than a kj/mol to over 500 kj/mol! Generally, the intermolecular forces are still weaker than covalent and ionic bonds: dispersion forces. Dispersion forces are found in all molecular substances. Such forces are electrostatic in nature and arise from attractions involving induced dipoles. Dispersion forces help explain why such things as nonpolar compounds dissolve in water or ethanol. The magnitude of dispersion forces depends on how easy it is to polarize the electron cloud of a molecule. A larger molecule has a larger polarizability. The process of inducing a dipole is called polarization. The higher the molar mass (and number of electrons), the higher the polarizability of the molecule. The larger the molecule, the larger the electron cloud. The larger the electron cloud, the more polarizable the molecule. The more polarizable, the stronger the dispersion forces. Neon and xenon are gases at room temperature, but both become liquids if the temperature is low enough.

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