Intramolecular vs Intermolecular Forces: The Difference
The names look almost identical, and that one syllable — intra vs inter — trips up thousands of students every exam season. Get it straight once and a whole chunk of chemistry (boiling points, states of matter, why ice floats) clicks into place. The short answer: intramolecular forces are the bonds inside a molecule that hold its atoms together (ionic, covalent, metallic) — they're strong. Intermolecular forces are the weaker attractions between separate molecules. The prefixes are the whole trick: intra means "within," inter means "between." Quick comparison at a glance Feature Intramolecular forces Intermolecular forces Where they act Within one molecule (atom to atom) Between separate molecules What they are Ionic, covalent, metallic bonds Dispersion, dipole–dipole, hydrogen bonds Relative strength Strong (~100–1000 kJ/mol) Weak (~1–40 kJ/mol) What breaking them means A chemical reaction A change of state (melt/boil) ...