Ok so an
1. electrolyte= any substance containing free ions that behaves as an electrically conductive medium. Because they generally consist of ions in solution, electrolytes are also known as ionic solutions
(a non electrolyte is a substance that doesn't contain an ion from my understanding)
So with this definition I'm thinking to identify if a solute is an electrolyte, i would need to see if it contains free ions?
Ion-an atom or molecule where the total number of electrons is not equal to the total number of protons, giving it a net positive or negative electrical charge
so in this case NO3 is an Ion therefore making Ca(NO3)2 an electrolyte, thus this is the compound where ion-dipole forces are encounter. (please let me know if I'm wrong with my reasoning at any stage)
Yep, you got it. Ca(NO
3)
2 is a salt, so it will break up into ions in water. Methanol won't.
2. A dipole is made in the moment of a positive charge encountering a negative charge (or vice versa). I looked at the structural formulas, but just the whole polarity concept confuses me.
Have you gone through the Lewis structure / covalent bonding chapter yet? Because some of the molecules you list don't have dipoles at all and some do, and in order to be able to tell the difference you need to be able to determine if a molecule has a dipole or not. This is normally done via
For a molecule,
1) come up with a good Lewis structure
2) determine the molecular shape via VSEPR
3) determine whether there are bond dipoles
4) determine whether the bond dipoles (if present) cancel or add together to give rise to a dipole for the whole molecule
For example, for carbon dioxide this would look like
1) ::O=C=O:: (two lone pairs on each oxygen atom, and two double bonds)
2) since the central atom (carbon) has two "electron groups" it's linear
3) since O and C have different electronegativities, yes there are bond dipoles, each points from the C to the O as in
O <--- C ---> O
4) since these two dipoles are equal and in opposite directions, they cancel and there is no molecular dipole, so the molecule is non-polar.
3. (a) Ok so lots of electrons and large size that would make me think CH4, CCl4, CBr4 (weakest to strongest) going from size and electrons.
(b) so going with what i found out from (a) i'm thinking that polarizability relates to the strength of dispersion forces. So the order would be the same (weak to strong) CH4, CCl4, CBr4
I appreciate your style of asking questions to help me find the answer. I feel i've learned a lot just from these 3 basic questions. Look forward to your response. And will post many more questions in the future.
(a) and (b) sound good. Glad to be of *delete me*