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1.

All molecules have London forces between them, but dipole-dipole and hydrogen
bonding are so much stronger that when they are present we can ignore London
forces. Which of these has ONLY London forces?
b.l2
2.Does H2O have hydrogen bonding?
yes
3.Which is stronger?
a.Intermolecular forces
4.Does HF have hydrogen bonding?
a.Yes
5.Van der Waals forces include
a.Both London and dipole-dipole attractions
6.Which kinds of substances are held together by intermolecular forces?
c.Molecules (covalent) in solid and liquid phases
7.Which of the following is NOT a kind of intermolecular force?
b.Covalent bond
8.Which of these molecules could have dipole-dipole attraction?
d.PCl3
9.Hydrogen bonding occurs when hydrogen is bonded to N, O, or F. Which of the
following has hydrogen bonding?
d.NH3
10.Does NH3 have hydrogen bonding?
b.Yes
11.A substance capable of hydrogen bonding has a ____________ boiling point than a
similar substance that doesn’t hydrogen bond.
a.Higher
12.Does NO2 have hydrogen bonding?
a. no
13.Does CH4 have hydrogen bonding?
b.no
14.Which is the second strongest intermolecular force, after hydrogen bonding?
b.Dipole-dipole attraction
15.Does H2S have hydrogen bonding?
a. no
16.London forces are stronger in heavier atoms or molecules, and weaker in lighter
atoms or molecules. Which of these has the strongest London forces?
d.l2
17.Does HCl have hydrogen bonding?
a. no
18.Which kind of intermolecular force is strongest?
c.Hydrogen bonding
19.Dipole-dipole attraction occurs when molecules are polar. Which of these
molecules contains a polar bond?
c.HCl
20.Which of these molecules could have dipole-dipole attractions?
b.HCl (electronegativity difference = 1.1)

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