The cause is the electrostatic force.
The intermolecular force for H2S is dipole-dipole interaction. Since H2S is a polar molecule with a bent molecular geometry, it experiences dipole-dipole forces between the slightly positive hydrogen atoms and the slightly negative sulfur atom.
This is an intermolecular force.
Intermolecular attraction
The intermolecular force present in PCl3 is dipole-dipole interactions. This is because PCl3 is a polar molecule, with a net dipole moment due to the unequal sharing of electrons between phosphorus and chlorine atoms.
Dimethyl ether exhibits dipole-dipole interactions as the main intermolecular force. It also experiences weak London dispersion forces.
yes, there is a NET field .electric dipole experiences a net field .(not in uniform E.Field)
This is an intermolecular force.
Intermoleculer attraction ;)
Dipole-dipole interactions are of electrostatic nature.
Intermolecular attraction
dipole-dipole force
Dipole-dipole interactions are of electrostatic nature.
The more polar the molecule, the stronger the force.
a hydrogen bond
These forces are: dipole-dipole force, hydrogen bond, induced dipole force and London dispersion force.
The intermolecular force for H2S is dipole-dipole interaction. Since H2S is a polar molecule with a bent molecular geometry, it experiences dipole-dipole forces between the slightly positive hydrogen atoms and the slightly negative sulfur atom.
This is an intermolecular force.