Sign In

11.2 : Intermolecular vs Intramolecular Forces

Intermolecular forces (IMF) are electrostatic attractions arising from charge-charge interactions between molecules. The strength of the intermolecular force is influenced by the distance of separation between molecules. The forces significantly affect the interactions in solids and liquids, where the molecules are close together. In gases, IMFs become important only under high-pressure conditions (due to the proximity of gas molecules). Intermolecular forces dictate the physical properties of substances, such as their melting point, boiling point, density, and enthalpies of fusion and vaporization. When a liquid is heated, the thermal energy acquired by its molecules overcomes the IMFs that hold them in place, and the liquid boils (converts into the gaseous state). Boiling points and melting points depend on the type and strength of the intermolecular forces. For example, a high boiling liquid, like water (H2O, b.p. 100 °C), exhibits stronger intermolecular forces compared to a low boiling liquid, like hexane (C6H14, b.p. 68.73 °C).

While intermolecular forces exist between molecules, intramolecular forces exist within molecules and hold the atoms in a given molecule together. Intramolecular forces keep a molecule intact; a change in the state of a substance does not affect intramolecular interactions. For example, although the melting of ice partially disrupts the intermolecular forces between solid H2O molecules, thereby rearranging them and converting ice into liquid water, it does not break down individual H2O molecules.

Intramolecular forces may be ionic, covalent, or metallic in nature.

Atoms gain (nonmetals) or lose electrons (metals) to form ions (anions and cations) with particularly stable electron configurations. Compounds composed of ions are called ionic compounds (or salts), and their constituent ions are held together by ionic bonds: electrostatic forces of attraction between oppositely charged cations and anions. For example, magnesium chloride (MgCl2) is an ionic compound composed of magnesium cations and chloride anions held together by strong ionic bonds.

A covalent bond (nonpolar or polar) is formed when electrons are shared between atoms, and a molecule is formed. Nonpolar covalent bonds arise when atoms share electrons equally, such as in hydrogen (H2). Polar covalent bonds form due to unequal sharing of electrons; one atom exerts a stronger force of attraction on the electrons than the other. An example is hydrogen chloride, HCl.

Metallic solids such as crystals of copper, aluminum, and iron are formed by metal atoms. The atoms within such a metallic solid are held together by a unique force known as metallic bonding that gives rise to many useful and varied bulk properties.

Intermolecular forces are much weaker compared to intramolecular forces. For example, to overcome the IMFs in one mole of liquid HCl and convert it into gaseous HCl requires only about 17 kilojoules. However, to break the covalent bonds between the hydrogen and chlorine atoms in one mole of HCl requires about 25 times more energy, which is 430 kilojoules.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Chapter 10: Liquids and Solids.

Tags
Intermolecular ForcesIntramolecular ForcesChemical SubstancesAtomsIonsElectrostatic InteractionCovalent BondIonic BondMetallic BondValence ElectronsNonmetal AtomsPositive Metal IonsDelocalized Valence ElectronsElectrostatic InteractionsNonbonding InteractionsIntermolecular ForcesPhysical PropertiesMelting PointBoiling PointIon dipole ForcesDipole dipole ForcesHydrogen Bonding

From Chapter 11:

article

Now Playing

11.2 : Intermolecular vs Intramolecular Forces

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

76.2K Views

article

11.1 : Molecular Comparison of Gases, Liquids, and Solids

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

36.5K Views

article

11.3 : Intermolecular Forces

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

47.9K Views

article

11.4 : Comparing Intermolecular Forces: Melting Point, Boiling Point, and Miscibility

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

40.6K Views

article

11.5 : Surface Tension, Capillary Action, and Viscosity

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

25.6K Views

article

11.6 : Phase Transitions

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

17.2K Views

article

11.7 : Phase Transitions: Vaporization and Condensation

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

15.5K Views

article

11.8 : Vapor Pressure

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

31.5K Views

article

11.9 : Clausius-Clapeyron Equation

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

51.5K Views

article

11.10 : Phase Transitions: Melting and Freezing

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

11.3K Views

article

11.11 : Phase Transitions: Sublimation and Deposition

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

15.0K Views

article

11.12 : Heating and Cooling Curves

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

20.4K Views

article

11.13 : Phase Diagrams

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

34.8K Views

article

11.14 : Structures of Solids

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

11.9K Views

article

11.15 : Molecular and Ionic Solids

Liquids, Solids, and Intermolecular Forces

15.2K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved