Chemistry, asked by sarah92, 1 year ago

THE IMAGE CONTAINS THE ANSWER
I recently joined the school, I haven't attended any classes and tomorrow is my first term chemistry exam
please explain theanswer, keeping in mind that i don't know anything, just explain the answer​

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Answered by Anonymous07
1

Answer: Disclaimer: There's no such thing called OverNight Success.

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Intermolecular Hydrogen Bonding: The attraction or attractive force between the Hydrogen and an electronegative atom or molecule like (F>O>N>Cl>Br>I>C>H>Metals) is known as Intermolecular Hydrogen Bonding.

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(Electronegative are those atoms/molecules can attract a bonding pair of electrons from another atom.)

Answered by Jayks77
1

Answer:

In physics, chemistry, and biology, intermolecular forces are forces that act between stable molecules or between functional groups of macromolecules

Explanation:

Hydrogen bond is a low kind type of dipole-dipole bond that exists between an electronegative molecule and a hydrogen molecule bonded to another electronegative molecule. This type of bond always involves a hydrogen atom. That explains the name.

Hydrogen bonds can occur between molecules (intermolecularly), or within different parts of a single molecule (intramolecularly).

The molecule is a substance are held together by the forces acting between the molecules which are called inter-molecular forces.

Intermolecular hydrogen bonding is responsible for the high boiling point of water (100 °C).

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