All Questions
6
questions
2
votes
1
answer
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Relative strength of intermolecular forces [duplicate]
My attempt at a solution:
First I look for hydrogen bonds:
The only compounds with hydrogen bonds are the second and fourth ones, so they have the strongest intermolecular forces. The second must have ...
1
vote
0
answers
45
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it is possible for the hydrogen bond to form between the hydrogen chloride molecule, HCl? [duplicate]
Recently I'm doing my work, and I can't find what it is the answer. Can you guys help me?
14
votes
2
answers
2k
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How to identify hydrogen bonds and other non-covalent interactions from structure considerations?
Chemistry is governed by a wide range of interactions, from ionic and covalent bonding, or other types of strong interactions, towards weaker types of bonding, attraction, or repulsion, that typically ...
23
votes
3
answers
14k
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Is Hydrogen Bonding a Type of Dipole Dipole Interaction?
I understand that dipole dipole forces is due to the attraction of the different partials charges of atoms in different molecules due to their different electro-negativities.
For hydrogen bonding, ...
4
votes
1
answer
633
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Bending of water and methanol towards a charged objects
I just had a question about why does water, methanol or any other polar substances tend to bend towards the charged object.
I think it is because of a slight dipole dipole movement between the ...
12
votes
2
answers
11k
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Which intermolecular interaction is dependent on the inverse cube of distance?
The intermolecular interaction that is dependent on the inverse cube of distance between molecules is:
hydrogen bond
ion-ion interaction
ion-dipole interaction
London force
Inverse ...