Define hydrogen bond. Is it weaker or stronger than the van der Waals forces?

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asked Oct 5, 2017 in Chemistry by jisu zahaan (28,760 points) 26 374 809

Define hydrogen bond. Is it weaker or stronger than the van der Waals forces? 

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answered Oct 5, 2017 by sforrest072 (157,439 points) 60 410 937
selected Oct 5, 2017 by sanjeev
 
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A hydrogen bond is defined as an attractive force acting between the hydrogen attached to an electronegative atom of one molecule and an electronegative atom of a different molecule (may be of the same kind). Due to a difference between electronegativities, the bond pair between hydrogen and the electronegative atom gets drifted far away from the hydrogen atom. As a result, a hydrogen atom becomes electropositive with respect to the other atom and acquires a positive charge.

The magnitude of H-bonding is maximum in the solid state and minimum in the gaseous state. There are two types of H-bonds: 

(i) Intermolecular H-bond e.g., HF, H2O etc. 

(ii) Intramolecular H-bond e.g., o-nitrophenol 

Hydrogen bonds are stronger than Van der Walls forces since hydrogen bonds are regarded as an extreme form of dipole-dipole interaction. 

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