Intermolecular forces:
van der Waals forces
Here’s a question to get
you thinking: how is it that monomolecular substances like the Noble gases can
both liquefy and freeze?
If these substances are
composed of single atoms how can these particles attract each other?
All Noble gases exist at
room temperature in the gaseous state.
There must be then at best fairly
weak forces between the atoms of these gases.
What must be happening
to allow the molecules to get closer and then to liquefy at lower temperatures?
What can explain the
fact that even helium the lightest and smallest of the atoms of the Noble gases
will enter the liquid state at 4K or –269oC?
Or, though you may never
have considered this, why can Gordon the Gecko climb a wall or even a glass
window without dropping off?
These and several other
phenomena are the result of van der Waals forces.
They are named after Johannes Van
Der Waals the Dutch Physicist.
These forces are the result of slight imbalances of electrical charge in individual but otherwise
electrically neutral atoms.
In the diagram below you
can see how at any instant in time the charge distribution within the atom
allows for the formation of a temporary dipole.
If two of these dipoles
line up correctly as in the diagram then there is a slight weak attraction
between the two particles.
The imbalance of charge
in one atom could also induce an imbalance of charge in another atom again the
result being a slight weak force of attraction between the two particles.
These weak induced
dipoles result in London forces or dispersion forces.
So when Noble gas atoms
are cooled these forces begin to act between the atoms and result in these
gases liquefying and solidifying at very low temperatures.
I guess the values of
their b.p. and m.p. tell you that these forces are pretty weak.
Still they are the
forces that act when Gordon Gecko climbs a glass ceiling.
It’s all in his feet.
Thousands of little
hairs called setae combine with the glass surface using van der Waals forces.
There is more here.
These are the forces between polythene molecules and that should tell you that if there are enough of these minute forces acting together between two long polythene chains then the overall effect can be considerable.
Hence polythene is a solid at room temperature with a reasonable melting point.
Same for the layers of graphite which are held together by thousands of van der Waals forces
See the diagram below:
Van der Waals forces are
the weakest of the intermolecular forces in existence in nature.
Van der Waals forces
exist between alkane molecules and between halogen molecules in fact between
all molecules.
The strength of these
forces depends on the number of electrons in the molecule or atom the greater
the number of electrons the stronger the potential dipole induced or
otherwise.
You can argue then that
these van der Waals forces sometimes called London or dispersion forces are
responsible for the variation in the boiling and melting points of the alkanes,
the halogens etc….
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