Inter & Intramolecular Forces (Cambridge (CIE) A Level Chemistry): Revision Note

Exam code: 9701

Richard Boole

Last updated

Comparing Bonds & Intermolecular Forces

Intramolecular forces

  • Intramolecular forces are forces within a molecule

  • Ionic bonding is the electrostatic attraction between positive (cations) and negative (anions) ions in an ionic crystal lattice

    • These ions are formed by transferring the electrons from one species to the other

  • Covalent bonds are formed when the outer electrons of two atoms are shared

  • Metallic bonding is the electrostatic attraction of positively charged metal ions and their delocalised electrons in a metal lattice

Intramolecular forces

Diagram of ionic, covalent, and metallic bonding. Ionic: electron transfer; covalent: electron sharing; metallic: delocalised electrons in a lattice.
The three types of intramolecular forces are ionic, covalent and metallic bonding

Intermolecular forces

  • Intermolecular forces are forces between molecules and are also called van der Waals’ forces

  • Permanent dipole - permanent dipole are the attractive forces between two neighbouring molecules with a permanent dipole

  • Hydrogen bonds are a special type of permanent dipole - permanent dipole forces

  • Instantaneous dipole - induced dipole (London dispersion) forces are the attractive forces between a temporary dipole and a neighbouring molecule with an induced dipole

Permanent dipoles as intermolecular forces

Diagram illustrating permanent dipole-permanent dipole forces between two polar molecules with opposite charges, showing separation and attraction.
Permanent dipole - permanent dipole are the intermolecular forces that occur between two neighbouring molecules with a permanent dipole

Instantaneous dipoles as intermolecular forces

Diagram of the formation of instantaneous dipole-induced dipole forces. Non-polar molecules form dipoles, creating intermolecular attractions.
Instantaneous dipole - induced dipole (London dispersion) forces are the intermolecular forces that occur between a temporary dipole and a neighbouring molecule with an induced dipole

Hydrogen bonding as an intermolecular force

Diagram of hydrogen bonds between water molecules, showing polar O-H bonds, permanent dipoles, and intermolecular forces with δ symbols indicating charges.
Hydrogen bonds are a special type of permanent dipole - permanent dipole forces
  • In general, intramolecular forces are stronger than intermolecular forces

  • The strengths of the types of bond or force are as follows:

The varying strengths of different types of bonds

Diagram ranking bonding types by strength: strongest is covalent, followed by hydrogen, permanent dipole, and weakest is instantaneous dipole.
In general, ionic bonding is the strongest force while instantaneous dipole - induced dipole is the weakest force

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Richard Boole

Author: Richard Boole

Expertise: Chemistry Content Creator

Richard has taught Chemistry for over 15 years as well as working as a science tutor, examiner, content creator and author. He wasn’t the greatest at exams and only discovered how to revise in his final year at university. That knowledge made him want to help students learn how to revise, challenge them to think about what they actually know and hopefully succeed; so here he is, happily, at SME.

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