Previous answer: "Cohesion is the attraction between like molecules. Hydrogen bonds form attractions between water molecules. Water's property of cohesion is due to the hydrogen bonds that hold the water molecules together."
This is correct. I would just also like to address the fact that cohesion due to hydrogen bonds is a property present in many, many liquids, especially the carboxylic acids (acetic/enthanoic acid, etc.) and similar compounds (sulfuric acid is a good example).
A hydrogen bond in chemistry and biochemistry is a type of intermolecular force between chargeslocated on different molecules or different parts of one large molecule. Although stronger than most other intermolecular forces, hydrogen bonds are much weaker than both the ionic and covalent bond. As the name implies, one part of the bond involves a hydrogen atom. The hydrogen must be attached to a strongly electronegative heteroatom, such as oxygen or nitrogen. This electronegative element has the effect of removing the electron cloud surrounding the hydrogen nucleus, leaving the atom with a positive partial charge[?]. Because the hydrogen atom is small on the molecular scale, this partial charge represents a very strong charge density. A hydrogen bond involves the positive proton (hydrogen nucleus) becoming attracted to a lone pair of negatively charged electrons on another heteroatom, the hydrogen bond acceptor. Despite the implications of the above description, the hydrogen bond is not a simple electrostatic attraction. It possesses some degree of directionality, and can be shown to have some of the characteristics of a covalent. This covalency is stronger the more electronegative the donor atom is, and hence is seen most strongly in the molecule hydrogen fluoride (HF). Generally speaking, the donor is that atom to which, in the absence of the hydrogen bond, the attachment of the hydrogen atom would not increase the positive formal charge on the molecule, whereas attaching the hydrogen to the acceptor atom would leave that portion of the molecule with a positive formal charge (dipole). The most ubiquitous, and perhaps simplest, example of a hydrogen bond is found in the interaction among water molecules. In a discrete water molecule, water has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Two molecules of water can form a hydrogen bond between them. The oxygen of one water molecule has two lone pairs of electrons, each of which can form a hydrogen bond with hydrogens on two other water molecules. This can repeat so that every water molecule is H-bonded with four other molecules (two through its 2 lone pairs, and two through its 2 hydrogen atoms.) H-O-H...O-H2 Liquid water's high boiling point is due to the high number of hydrogen bonds each molecule can have relative to its low molecular mass. Water is unique because its oxygen atom has 2 lone pairs and 2 hydrogen atoms, meaning that the total number of bonds of a water molecule is 4. (For example, hydrogen fluoride - which has 2 lone pairs on the F atom but only one H atom - can have a total of only 2 bonds.) H-F...H-F...H-F In solid water (i.e., ice), the crystalline lattice is dominated by a regular array of hydrogen bonds which space the water molecules farther apart than they are in liquid water. This accounts for water's decrease in density upon freezing. In other words, the presence of hydrogen bonds enables ice to float, because this spacing causes ice to be less dense than liquid water. Were the bond strengths more equivalent, one might instead find the atoms of two interacting water molecules partitioned into two polyatomic ions of opposite charge, specifically hydroxide and hydronium. H-O- H3O+ Indeed, in pure water under conditions of standard temperature and pressure, this latter formulation is applicable only rarely, on average but once in every 10-14 times (which is the value of the dissociation constant for water under such conditions). Hydrogen bonding also plays an important role in determining the three-dimensional structures adopted by proteins and nucleic acids (see protein folding problem[?]). In these macromolecules, intramolecular hydrogen bonding between groups in the same protein or nucleic acid molecule cause the molecule to fold into specific shapes, thus affecting molecular function. For example, the classic double helix of DNA is due to the presence of hydrogen bonds between the bases of the nucleic acids in each strand of the helix. In proteins, hydrogen bonds form between the backbone oxygens and amide hydrogens. When the spacing of the amino acid residues participating in a hydrogen bond occurs regularly between positions i and i+4, an alpha helix is formed. When the spacing is less, between positions i and i+3, then a 310 helix is formed. When two strands are joined by hydrogen bonds involving alternating residues on each participating strand, a beta sheet is formed.
Yes, in most instances. Water is an example of one. The cohesive tendencies of the H bonds create surface tension in water. This is because water is a polar molecule and the polar negative (?) hydrogen creates a weak bond to the polar opposite Oxygen atom in another water molecule
Hydrogen bonds are the source of internal cohesion of liquids of polar molecules. A drop of water beads-up because of the hydrogen bonding among the water molecules in the drop...
Cohesion of water molecules occurs through the formation of hydrogen bonds between molecules
adhesion is the attraction which allows molecules of different kinds of matter to stick together!
They type of chemical bond that is responsible for the properties of adhesion and cohesion is hydrogen bonding. In cohesion the water's hydrogen bonds make water self-sticky, it beads up. In adhesion water has the ability to climb up the wall of any container it is in.
Cohesion force among water molecules and transpiration pull.
Hydrogen bonds
Yes
hydrogen bonds
Hydrogen bonds are the reason for cohesion and Van Der Waals equation is the cause of adhesion.
Hydrogen Bonds
adhesion
Cohesion of water molecules occurs through the formation of hydrogen bonds between molecules
adhesion and cohesion
adhesion is the attraction which allows molecules of different kinds of matter to stick together!
They type of chemical bond that is responsible for the properties of adhesion and cohesion is hydrogen bonding. In cohesion the water's hydrogen bonds make water self-sticky, it beads up. In adhesion water has the ability to climb up the wall of any container it is in.
It is called surface tension. Somehow the water molecules are "magnetic" to each other. Hydrogen bonds are the primary intermolecular forces responsible for the unusually high cohesion forces (this is the cause behind surface tension) of water. The H-O bonds in the water molecules are highly polarized because of the large electronegativity differences between oxygen and hydrogen and there is a partial negative charge on the oxygen and a partial positive charge on the hydrogen. These partial charges are still able to attract each other and these electric attractions give rise to the high cohesion of water. Other compounds that exhibit this phenomenon of hydrogen bonding include ethanol and ammonia. Biological macromolecules also use hydrogen bonds to maintain their strucutres. For example, the two strands of DNA are held together by hydrogen bonds.
Cohesion force among water molecules and transpiration pull.
Hydrogen bonds