covalent bonds
Intramolecular forces are not intermolecular forces !
Covalent bonds can be classified as intramolecular forces.
intramolecular force
Yes, intramolecular forces such as covalent bonds in paradichlorobenzene are stronger than intermolecular forces like van der Waals forces between molecules. Intramolecular forces hold atoms within a molecule together, while intermolecular forces act between molecules.
No, dipole-dipole forces are intermolecular forces - they occur between different molecules. Intramolecular forces, on the other hand, act within a single molecule to hold its atoms together.
Intermolecular forces are based on electrostatic attraction and/or polarisation phenomena. Intramolecular bonds involve covalent bonds, polar or non-polar.
Intermolecular forces are the forces between molecules which hold two or more of them together; intramolecular forces happen inside of the molecule, & are the forces holding the atoms together witch form the molecule.
In the case of a covalent bond, the intramolecular force is stronger than the intermolecular force. The covalent bond holds atoms together within a molecule, while intermolecular forces are weaker interactions between molecules.
intramolecular force not intermolecular force (I got it right on a test)
Intramolecular attraction forces between atoms.
According to my Chemistry 2 notes from this most recent semester, the only intramolecular (between molecules) forces that we went over were Dipole-Dipole forces. These forces include Hydrogen bonding.
covalent bonds