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Interpretation: The atoms in addition to hydrogen which are necessary for hydrogen bonding needs to be explained. The contribution of small size of hydrogen atom to the unusual strength of dipole-dipole forces involved in hydrogen bonding needs to be explained.
Concept introduction: The hydrogen bond may be defined as strong dipole-dipole forces of attraction that operates between a hydrogen atom that is covalently bonded to an atom of high electronegativity.
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Answer to Problem 3A
Fluorine, oxygen, and nitrogen in addition to hydrogen is needed for hydrogen bonding.
Explanation of Solution
The covalent bond between hydrogen and an electronegative element is considerably polar because the electronegative atom attracts the bonding electron towards itself. The partial positive charge on hydrogen attracts the partial negative charge of an electronegative atom forming what is called hydrogen bonding.
Due the very small size of the hydrogen atom the dipoles can approach each other closely which increases the strength of hydrogen bonding. Atoms bigger in size can disrupt the hydrogen bonding because it will find difficulty in coming closer to each other.
Fluorine, oxygen, and nitrogen in addition to hydrogen needed for hydrogen bonding.
Chapter 14 Solutions
World of Chemistry, 3rd edition
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- Indicate which option is false(A). Resistivity has a residual component and a thermal component.(B). In some materials resistivity increases with T and in others it decreases.(C). In insulating materials, resistivity is very low.arrow_forwardIn ceramic materials, in relation to polymorphism, the same substance crystallizes differently when external conditions vary. Is this correct?arrow_forwardIndicate the type of bond that is considered to be a hydrogen bond.(A). Permanent dipole-dipole interaction between polar molecules.(B). Mixed ionic-covalent bond.(C). Principal interatomic bond(D). Van del Waals forces.arrow_forward
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