Boiling can only occur when the kinetic energy of heat overcomes the intermolecular forces holding a liquid together, so the greater the intermolecular forces, the higher the boiling point.
Polar molecules have relatively weak intermolecular forces. Intermolecular forces and boiling point have a direct relationship, so due to the fact that polar molecules have weak forces, their boiling points will be lower.
The greater the potential of a liquid's molecules to interact with each other through intermolecular forces, the lower the vapour pressure is going to be above the liquid (because molecules will preferentially stay liquid and interact with other molecules rather than fly away as a gas), and the lower the boiling point of the liquid. Therefore the relationship is an inverse one.
The stronger the intermolecular forces, the higher the melting point and boiling point. The weaker the intermolecular forces, the lower the melting and boiling points are.
The physical properties of melting point, boiling point, vapor pressure, evaporation, viscosity, surface tension, and solubility are related to the strength of attractive forces between molecules.
An intermolecular force has both a boiling point and melting point
Boiling point
boiling point
Very much higher.
Polar molecules have relatively weak intermolecular forces. Intermolecular forces and boiling point have a direct relationship, so due to the fact that polar molecules have weak forces, their boiling points will be lower.
The greater the potential of a liquid's molecules to interact with each other through intermolecular forces, the lower the vapour pressure is going to be above the liquid (because molecules will preferentially stay liquid and interact with other molecules rather than fly away as a gas), and the lower the boiling point of the liquid. Therefore the relationship is an inverse one.
The stronger the intermolecular forces, the higher the melting point and boiling point. The weaker the intermolecular forces, the lower the melting and boiling points are.
The physical properties of melting point, boiling point, vapor pressure, evaporation, viscosity, surface tension, and solubility are related to the strength of attractive forces between molecules.
The longer the hydrocarbon chain, the stronger the intermolecular forces. This leads to higher boiling point, and these chains are likely to be less useful.
Boiling point is a property not a force; but a high boiling point indicate a strong intermolecular force.
An intermolecular force has both a boiling point and melting point
the stronger the intermolecular force, the more energy is required to boil the liquid ...
The intermolecular bonds between particles in a substance are breaking, causing them to fly around.