re: HSC Chemistry Marathon Archive
And water has a net dipole so there exists dipole-dipole forces (diagrams everywhere on the net.)
I might just read more on chem (extra general knowledge)... can anyone confirm this?
I read on the interwebs that hydrogen bonding is a specific version of dipole-dipole force. That is, hydrogen bonding is a dipole-dipole force but with interaction of specified atoms (H, F, O, N). Whereas, a normal dipole-dipole is associated with any atoms.Does the water molecule only have hydrogen bonding intermolecular forces or does it also have dipole dipole forces - some websites say it does and some say it doesn't so I'm a bit confused. I originally though water doesnt have dipole dipole forces because its a symmetrical molecule...
And water has a net dipole so there exists dipole-dipole forces (diagrams everywhere on the net.)
I might just read more on chem (extra general knowledge)... can anyone confirm this?
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