Hydrogen bonding is a type of?permanent dipole – permanent dipole?bonding
For hydrogen bonding to take place the following is needed:
A species which has an?O?or?N?(very?electronegative) atom with an available?lone pair?of electrons
A species with an?-OH?or?-NH?group
When hydrogen is covalently bonded to an?electronegative?atom, such as?O?or?N, the bond becomes very highly?polarised
The H becomes so?δ+?charged that it can form a bond with the?lone pair?of an?O?or?N atom?in another molecule
The electronegative atoms O or N have a stronger pull on the electrons in the covalent bond with hydrogen, causing the bond to become polarised
For hydrogen bonding to take place, the?angle?between the?-OH/-NH?and the?hydrogen bond?is?180o
The number of hydrogen bonds depends on:
The number of hydrogen atoms attached to O or N in the molecule
The number of?lone?pairs?on the O or N
Ammonia can form a maximum of one hydrogen bond per molecule
Water can form a maximum of two hydrogen bonds per molecule
Properties of water
Hydrogen bonding in water, causes it to have?anomalous properties?such as high melting and boiling points, high surface tension and anomalous density of ice compared to water
High melting & boiling points
Water has high?melting?and?boiling points?which is caused by the?strong intermolecular forces?of hydrogen bonding between the molecules
In?ice?(solid H2O) and water (liquid H2O) the molecules are tightly held together by hydrogen bonds
A lot of energy is therefore required to break the water molecules apart and melt or boil them
Hydrogen bonds are strong intermolecular forces which are difficult to break causing water to have high melting and boiling points
The graph below compares the?enthalpy of vaporisation?(energy required to boil a substance) of different hydrides
The enthalpy changes?increase?going from H2S to H2Te due to the increased number of electrons in the Group 16 elements
This causes an?increased instantaneous dipole - induced dipole forces?as the molecules become larger
Based on this, H2O would have a much lower enthalpy change (around 17 kJ mol-1)
However, the enthalpy change of vaporisation is almost 3 times?larger?which is caused by the?hydrogen bonds?present in water but not in the other hydrides
The high enthalpy change of evaporation of water suggests that instantaneous dipole-induced dipole forces are not the only forces present in the molecule – there are also those of the strong hydrogen bonds, which cause the high boiling points
High surface tension
Water has a?high surface tension
Surface?tension?is the ability of a?liquid surface?to resist any?external forces?(i.e. to stay unaffected by forces acting on the surface)
The water molecules at the?surface?of liquid are bonded to other water molecules through?hydrogen?bonds
These molecules?pull downwards?on the?surface molecules?causing the surface them to become compressed and more tightly together at the surface
This increases water’s?surface?tension
The surface molecules are pulled downwards due to the hydrogen bonds with other molecules, whereas the inner water molecules are pulled in all directions
Density
Solids?are?denser?than their?liquids?as the particles in solids are more?closely packed?together than in their liquid state
In ice however, the water molecules are packed in a?3D?hydrogen-bonded?network in a?rigid lattice
Each oxygen atom is surrounded by hydrogen atoms
This way of packing the molecules in a solid and the relatively long?bond lengths?of the hydrogen bonds means that the water molecules are slightly further apart than in the liquid form
Therefore, ice has a lower density than liquid water
The ‘more open’ structure of molecules in ice causes it to have a lower density than liquid water
Exam Tip
Ice floats on water because of ice's lower density.