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23 January, 04:08

Suppose that NaCl is added to hexane (C6H14) instead of water. Which of the following intermolecular forces will exist in the system?

Check all that apply.

Ion-dipole force between Na + ions and a hexane molecule

Ion-ion force between Na + and Cl - ions

Dipole-dipole force between two hexane molecules

Hydrogen bonding between Na + ions and a hexane molecule

London dispersion force between two hexane molecules

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Answers (2)
  1. 23 January, 05:15
    0
    Ion-ion force between Na + and Cl - ions

    London dispersion force between two hexane molecules

    Explanation:

    "Ion-dipole force between Na + ions and a hexane molecule " does not exist since hexane has only non-polar bonds and therefore no dipole.

    "Ion-ion force between Na + and Cl - ions " exists since both are ions.

    "Dipole-dipole force between two hexane molecules " does not exist since hexane molecules do not have a dipole.

    "Hydrogen bonding between Na + ions and a hexane molecule " does not exist since the hydrogen in the hydrogen bond must be bonded directly to an electronegative atom, which hexane does not have since it is a hydrocarbon.

    "London dispersion force between two hexane molecules" exist since hexane is a molecular compound.
  2. 23 January, 08:00
    0
    Ion-ion force between Na⁺ and Cl⁻ ions.

    London dispersion force between two hexane molecules.

    Explanation:

    Suppose that NaCl is added to hexane (C₆H₁₄) instead of water. Which of the following intermolecular forces will exist in the system?

    Check all that apply.

    Ion-dipole force between Na⁺ ions and a hexane molecule. NO. Hexane is nonpolar so it can interact through ion-dipole forces. Ion-ion force between Na⁺ and Cl⁻ ions. YES. Na⁺ is a cation (positive ion) and interacts with the anion (negative ion) Cl⁻ through ion-ion forces. Dipole-dipole force between two hexane molecules. NO. Since hexane molecules are not dipoles, they do not show dipole-dipole interaction. Hydrogen bonding between Na⁺ ions and a hexane molecule. NO. Hydrogen bonding requires H bonded to a very electronegative atom, such as N, O or F, which does not happen in hexane. London dispersion force between two hexane molecules. YES. The kind of interaction between nonpolar molecules is London dispersion force.
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