Thank you so much. It makes total sense now. I saw guy in youtube who teaches that whenever I see H-F means its automatically hydrogen bonding.. which is not the case. only if its bonded together. Thank you again
According to my chemistry teacher, the higher the boiling point, the higher the LDF. So why is it that CO2 (it has only LDF) has the lowest boiling point?
You meant the stronger the LDF, the higher the boiling point. It only applies if you are comparing compounds/element that only displays that kind of IMF (e.g. O2 vs CO2). In the video, CO2 has the lowest BP since it only has LDF as its intermolecular force present compared to the other compounds (H2O, CH2F2, MgBr2)
Pov you have a chemistry test today
Good luck!!!
@@straightscience2248 tysm, did great on the test
@@opmonkeyz6839 Hooray!!
How did you know
Thank you so much. It makes total sense now. I saw guy in youtube who teaches that whenever I see H-F means its automatically hydrogen bonding.. which is not the case. only if its bonded together. Thank you again
Thank you it’s so clear and easy to understand
Thank you!!! I have a chem exam tomorrow this really helped :)
Thx sm was rlly stressed now it makes sense
I wish I could like this video more than once. Thank You!!!!
That really helped me out thank you so much !
Excellent
omg so helpful
This helped so so so much thank you
Hi! Great video! wanted to ask something just to be sure, ionic bonds are both intermolecular and intramolecular righr?
You are amazing
thanks
you are doing the lords work. thank you.
Very helpful
What if you have 2 ionic
omgg😭so much easier to get!
According to my chemistry teacher, the higher the boiling point, the higher the LDF. So why is it that CO2 (it has only LDF) has the lowest boiling point?
You meant the stronger the LDF, the higher the boiling point. It only applies if you are comparing compounds/element that only displays that kind of IMF (e.g. O2 vs CO2). In the video, CO2 has the lowest BP since it only has LDF as its intermolecular force present compared to the other compounds (H2O, CH2F2, MgBr2)