ionic bond
The hydrogen bond is not strong.
Dipole-dipole interactions are of electrostatic nature.
Intermolecular attraction
These forces are: dipole-dipole force, hydrogen bond, induced dipole force and London dispersion force.
dipole moments increase with the polarity
The hydrogen bond is not strong.
a hydrogen bond
The compound where dipole-dipole attractions are the most important intermolecular force is CH3Cl (methyl chloride). This is because CH3Cl has a permanent dipole moment due to the difference in electronegativity between carbon and chlorine atoms, leading to strong dipole-dipole interactions.
A Hydrogen Bond. -Apex
When the range of electronegativity between the atoms are really high. For example, hydrogen has 2.20 elctronegativity and fluorine has 3.98 and the range between them is 1.78. Compared to like nitrogen (3.04) and oxygen (3.44), whose range is 0.4, the hydrogen and fluorine will have a strong dipole-dipole force.
A molecule with a polar covalent bond, such as hydrogen fluoride (HF) or hydrogen chloride (HCl), will have a very strong dipole-dipole force due to the difference in electronegativity between the bonded atoms. This creates a significant imbalance in charge distribution within the molecule, resulting in a strong attraction between the positive and negative ends of neighboring molecules.
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.