Van der Waals bonds arise from the interaction between two

Chapter 42, Problem 59CP

(choose chapter or problem)

Get Unlimited Answers
QUESTION:

CP         Van der Waals bonds arise from the interaction between two permanent or induced electric dipole moments in a pair of atoms or molecules. (a) Consider two identical dipoles, each consisting of charges +q and -q separated by a distance d and oriented as shown in Fig. P42.59a. Calculate the electric potential energy, expressed in terms of the electric dipole moment p = qd, for the situation where \(r \gg d\). Is the interaction attractive or repulsive, and how does this potential energy vary with r, the separation between the centers of the two dipoles? (b) Repeat part (a) for the orientation of the dipoles shown in Fig. P42.59b. The dipole interaction is more complicated when we have to average over the relative orientations of the two dipoles due to thermal motion or when the dipoles are induced rather than permanent.

Questions & Answers

QUESTION:

CP         Van der Waals bonds arise from the interaction between two permanent or induced electric dipole moments in a pair of atoms or molecules. (a) Consider two identical dipoles, each consisting of charges +q and -q separated by a distance d and oriented as shown in Fig. P42.59a. Calculate the electric potential energy, expressed in terms of the electric dipole moment p = qd, for the situation where \(r \gg d\). Is the interaction attractive or repulsive, and how does this potential energy vary with r, the separation between the centers of the two dipoles? (b) Repeat part (a) for the orientation of the dipoles shown in Fig. P42.59b. The dipole interaction is more complicated when we have to average over the relative orientations of the two dipoles due to thermal motion or when the dipoles are induced rather than permanent.

ANSWER:

Add to cart


Study Tools You Might Need

Not The Solution You Need? Search for Your Answer Here:

×

Login

Login or Sign up for access to all of our study tools and educational content!

Forgot password?
Register Now

×

Register

Sign up for access to all content on our site!

Or login if you already have an account

×

Reset password

If you have an active account we’ll send you an e-mail for password recovery

Or login if you have your password back