Unidad 61
Unidad 61
Unidad 61
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Intermolecular forces, liquids and solids
The majority of chemical elements are solid at 25 ° C and 1 atm.
Only 11 elements are in gaseous form under these conditions (H2, N2,
O2, F2, Cl2 and noble gases) , 2 are liquids (Hg e Br2).
Many compounds are gaseous (CH4 e CO2) or liquid (H2O) at standard
temperature and pressure, but most are solids.
When 300 ml of
liquid N2 Gaseous
nitrogen
evaporate,they
produce more than
200 L of gas at 25 °
C and 1 atm
• ion-ion
• ion-dipole
• dipole-dipole
• dipole-induced dipole
• induced dipole-induced dipole van der Waals forces
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Solid state
In the solid state, particles (atoms, ions or molecules) occupy fixed
positions and their movement is limited to vibrational motions.
Generally, particles are ordered in crystal lattices.
The cohesive forces that hold together particles in the solid state,
can vary in intensity. In many cases we have ionic or covalent bonds, in
other we have hydrogen bonds. Some molecules are held together by
hydrophobic interactions (van der Waals forces).
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Classes of solids
Aluminum:
metallic
solid
NaCl
crystal:
ionic
solid
Polyethilene:
amorphous
solid
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• Diamond
and
graphite,
two
allotropes
of
carbon,
are
network
atomic
solids.
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Structures and properties of various types of solids
ionic NaCl, K2SO4, Positive and negative ionic: attarction hardness, brilliant, high
CaCl2, (NH4)3PO4 ions between negative and Tmelting, low electrical
positive charges conductivty, often soluble in
H2O
metallic Fe, Ag, Cu, alloys Metal ions (delocalized Metallic: electrostatic Malleability,
electrons) attraction between ductility,electric and heat
ions and electronds conductivity, wide range of
Tmelting,
molecular H2, O2, I2, H2O, molecules Dispersion forces, Tmelting and Teboiling form
CO2, CH4,, dipole-dipole forces, low to moderate. Low
CH3OH hydrogen bonds conductivity.
reticular diamond, graphite, Atoms bound in a tri- covalent High hardness and Tfusione,
quartz, silicon or bi-dimensional bassa conducibilità
lattice elettricalow electric
conductivity
amorphous glass, nylon, Aperiodic covalent Covalent + Dispersion Non crystalline, wide
polyethylene bonds forces, dipole-dipole Tmelting range, low electric
forces, hydrogen conductivity
bonds 8
Physical propertied of solids
Melting is the conversion from solid to liquid.
The melting point of a solid is the temperature at
which the crystal lattice collapses and the solid
becomes liquid.
liquid
ΔHmelting -ΔHmelting
solid
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Element/ Tmelting ΔHmelting Intermolecular forces
compound (°C) (kJ/mol)
metals
Hg -39 2.29
metallic
Na 98 2.60
Melting points of some elements and compounds Al 660 10.7
Ti 1668 20.9
W 3422 35.2
Apolar molecular solids
O2 -219 0.440
Dispersion forces
F2 -220 0.510
Cl2 -102 6.41
Br2 -7.2 10.8
Polar molecular solids
HCl -114 1.99 Disersion forces
HBr -87 2.41
HI -51 2.87
H 2O 0 6.02
Hydrogen bonds
Ionic solids
NaF 996 33.4
Ion-ion
NaCl 801 28.2
NaBr 747 26.1
NaI 660 23.6
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Sublimation is a transition from solid to gas. It is an endothermic
process. The energy required is called the enthalpy of sublimation:
ΔHsublimation
Gas
ΔHsub -ΔHsub
solid
I2 sublimates upon Ice in the tube induces
heating with warm I2 condensation.
water.
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Liquids
The most difficult to describe. The molecules of a gas under normal conditions
are far from each other and can be considered independent. The structure of
solids can be described easily because the particles (atoms, ions or molecules)
are close to each other but are regularly spaced. In liquids, however, the
particles interact with each other as in a solid, but are disordered.
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Liquid
and
solid
bromine
Gaseous
and
liquid
bromine
Properties of liquids
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Evaporation
It is the transition from liquid to gas. The distribution of energy in the
liquid is similar to that of gases (Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution). Like a
gas, the average energy of molecules in a liquid depends only on the
temperature: the higher the temperature, the higher the average energy
and the fraction of molecules with high kinetic energy.
Number of
molecules
that have a kinetic
energy
Number
of
molecules
allowing evaporation
at T1
Number of
molecules
that have a kinetic
Energy energy
allowing evaporation
at T2
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In a liquid there are few molecules with a kinetic energy larger than the
energy of intermolecular attractive forces. If these "very fast" molecules are
at the surface, they can move into the gas phase.
vapour
interface
liquid
Molar enthalpy of vaporization and boiling points for some elements and compounds
mol)
=760 mmHg)
Polar compounds
HF
20.0
19.7
25.2
HCl
36.5
-84.8
16.2
HBr
80.9
-66.4
19.3
NH3
17.0
-33.3
23.3
H2O
18.0
100.0
40.7
gas
Apolar compounds
CH4
16.0
-161.5
8.2
C2H6
30.1
-88.6
14.7
ΔHevap -ΔHevap
C3H8
44.1
-42.1
19.0
C4H10
58.1
-0.5
22.4
Monoatomic elements
liquid
He
4.0
-268.9
0.08
Ne
20.2
-246.1
1.7
Ar
39.9
-185.9
6.4
Xe
131.3
-108.0
12.6
Diatomic elements
H2
2.0
-252.9
0.9
N2
28.0
-195.8
5.6
O2
32.0
-183.0
6.8
Cl2
70.9
-34.0
20.4
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Vapour pressure
If volatile liquid is placed in a closed container, it evaporates until the
evaporation rate equals the rate of condensation. In this final state the
system is in dynamic equilibrium. At liquid-vapour equilibrium the equilibrium
vapour pressure is measured.
liquid vapour
Ini?al Equilibrium
Time
Vola?le
liquid
Vapour
pressure
Mercury
in
a
tube
at
the
connected
experimental
to
the
container
temperature
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The vapour pressure of a compound is a measure of the tendency of its molecules to
escape from the liquid phase into the vapour phase change at a given temperature. The
higher the vapour pressure, the more volatile the substance. Vapour pressure increases
with temperature: a higher number of molecules have sufficient energy to escape from
the liquid surface.
Diethyl
Ethanol
H2O
Ether
liq.
vap
.
Temperature (C°)
Temperature (C°)
liquid
interface
vapour
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A supercritical fluid can have unexpected properties such as, for
example, the ability to dissolve substances generally insoluble.
Supercritical CO2 is used to extract caffeine from coffee
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Phase diagram
A substance may be solid, liquid or gaseous, depending on the conditions
of temperature and pressure. Moreover, under certain conditions, two or
even three states can coexist in equilibrium. For water:
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The ice structure is “open” it is less dense than liquid water.
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In most substances the melting point increases increasing pressure (the
a-b curve has a positive slope): the liquid has a lower density than the
solid and melting implies a decrease in volume. Eg CO2. Some compounds
such as H2O (and bismuth) decrease in volume upon melting, an increase
of pressure lowers the melting point (a-b curve has a negative slope).
CO2 H2O
b
b
solid liquid
liquid
solid
Pressure
Pressure
vapour
a
vapoue
a
Temperature Temperature
In polar molecules the dipole-dipole interactions affect evaporation
and condensation.
H2O (l) + heat -> H2O (g) ΔHevap>0
Vapour
ΔH of ΔH of condensation
evaporation (exothermic)
(endothermic)
Liquid
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An example of the interaction between ions and polar molecules:
the formation of hydrated ions in aqueous solution.
Na+(g) + 6 H2O (l) → [Na(H2O)6]+ (aq) + heat ΔHhyd = -405 kJ/mol
D—H· · · A
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Hydrogen bond (5-30 kJ mol-1)
Is formed between a hydrogen atom bound to an electronegative
atom called donor and a dipole on a molecule or a functional group.
Hydrogen bond
1.8 Å
donor acceptor
2.8 Å
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In ice, and to a lesser extent in liquid water, each
molecule donates and accepts 2 hydrogen bonds
Hydogen
bonds
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Examples of hydrogen bonds
Acceptor
Donor
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Some specific examples of hydrogen bond.
Between
a
Between
hydroxyl
carbonylic
group
of
Between
pep?dic
Between
groups
and
water
a
ketone
and
water
bonds
of
proteins
complementary
bases
of
DNA
Thymine
Adenine
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The strength of hydrogen bonds depends on its direction.
Strong Weak
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Clausius-Clapeyron equation.
!H evap
ln P = " +C
RT
Rudolf Clausius (1822–1888)
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