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Water Molecules Form Hydrogen Bonds


dr.Dugi

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An unshielded hydrogen nucleus covalently bound to an electron-withdrawing oxygen or nitrogen atom can interact with an unshared electron pair on another oxygen or nitrogen atom to form a hydrogen bond. Since water molecules contain both of these features, hydrogen bonding favors the self-association of water molecules into ordered arrays. Hydrogen bonding profoundly influences the physical properties of water and accounts for its exceptionally high viscosity, surface tension, and boiling point. On average, each molecule in liquid water associates through hydrogen bonds with 3.5 others. These bonds are both relatively weak and transient, with a half-life of about one microsecond. Rupture of a hydrogen bond in liquid water requires only about 4.5 kcal/mol, less than 5% of the energy required to rupture a covalent O-H bond.
Hydrogen bonding enables water to dissolve many organic biomolecules that contain functional groups
which can participate in hydrogen bonding. The oxygen atoms of aldehydes, ketones, and amides provide pairs of electrons that can serve as hydrogen acceptors. Alcohols and amines can serve both as hydrogen acceptors and as donors of unshielded hydrogen atoms for formation of hydrogen bonds.

Thank u !

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QUOTE: "Hydrogen bonding enables water to dissolve many organic biomolecules that contain functional groups which participate in Hydrogen bonding."

 

I'm not a fan of this sentence... although kinda true I would say it was because the water molecules are polar... it is a solvent to these molecules because it is polar... the Hydrogen bonding is a side effect of the water molecule being polar and the high electronegativity of the Oxygen and the tiny unshielded H atoms. Saying it is a solvent BECAUSE it forms hydrogen bonds doesn't sit right on my tongue. I could be wrong about the semantics, I do not know - please correct me if I am wrong. :)

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