Types of Intermolecular Forces
Intermolecular forces exist between molecules, unlike intramolecular forces that hold atoms together within a molecule. The three main types vary in strength.
Dipole-Dipole Forces occur between polar molecules where the positive end of one molecule attracts the negative end of another. When this involves hydrogen bonded to fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen, it's called hydrogen bonding, which is particularly strong.
Dipole-Induced Dipole Forces happen when a permanent dipole in a polar molecule creates a temporary dipole in a nearby nonpolar molecule. Think of water molecules inducing temporary dipoles in oxygen molecules.
London Dispersion Forces (LDFs) are the weakest type but exist in all molecules. They're the only intermolecular forces in nonpolar molecules like Cl₂. LDFs result from temporary, random dipoles and their strength depends on the size of the electron cloud - larger molecules with more electrons typically have stronger LDFs.
💡 Don't assume polar molecules always have stronger attractions! Sometimes LDFs in large nonpolar molecules (like Cl₂) can be stronger than the combined forces in smaller polar molecules (like HCl).