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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) ...

What Is a Lewis Structure? Dots, Bonds, and Octets

Chemistry throws molecular formulas at you like H₂O and CO₂, but a formula doesn't show how the atoms actually connect. A Lewis structure is the little dot-and-line drawing that fills in that gap — and once you can draw one, molecules stop being mysterious. The short answer: a Lewis structure (or electron-dot structure) is a diagram that shows how the valence electrons of atoms are arranged in a molecule. Shared pairs (the bonds) are drawn as lines, and unshared pairs (lone pairs) are drawn as dots, so you can see at a glance which atoms are bonded and where the leftover electrons sit. What a Lewis structure actually shows A Lewis structure tracks only the valence electrons — the outer-shell electrons that do the bonding. It uses two symbols: A line = a bonding pair (two shared electrons). A double line is two shared pairs; a triple line is three. A pair of dots = a lone pair (two electrons that belong to one atom and aren't shared). The goal is usually to give e...

Polar vs Nonpolar Bonds: What's the Difference?

You know a covalent bond means two atoms share electrons — but do they share fairly? Sometimes one atom pulls harder, and that tug-of-war is the whole difference between a polar and a nonpolar bond. The short answer: a nonpolar bond shares its electrons roughly equally, so no end of the bond is more negative than the other. A polar bond shares them unequally — one atom pulls the electrons closer and gains a small negative charge (δ−), leaving the other slightly positive (δ+). What decides which you get is the electronegativity difference (ΔEN) between the two atoms. Quick comparison at a glance Feature Nonpolar bond Polar bond Electron sharing Equal (or nearly) Unequal Electronegativity difference (ΔEN) Small (about 0–0.4) Moderate (about 0.4–1.7) Partial charges None δ+ on one atom, δ− on the other Typical atoms Same element, or two similar nonmetals Two different nonmetals Dipole (an "arrow" of charge) No Yes Examples H₂, Cl₂, O₂,...

What Is Electronegativity? Trends and Examples

When two atoms share electrons in a bond, the sharing is rarely fair. One atom almost always pulls harder than the other. Electronegativity is the number that captures that pull — and it quietly decides whether a bond turns out ionic, polar, or perfectly even. The short answer: electronegativity is a measure of how strongly an atom attracts the shared electrons in a chemical bond. The higher an atom's electronegativity, the harder it tugs the bonding electrons toward itself. What electronegativity actually measures Picture a chemical bond as a tug-of-war over a pair of electrons. Electronegativity tells you how strong each atom is in that contest. A highly electronegative atom (like fluorine or oxygen) pulls the shared electrons close. A weakly electronegative atom (like sodium) barely pulls at all and tends to lose the electrons outright. Chemists put this on a scale called the Pauling scale , running from about 0.7 up to 3.98: Fluorine (F) = 3.98 — the most electronega...

Cation vs Anion: What's the Difference?

You've met ions — atoms with a charge. They come in exactly two flavours: cations and anions . The names sound almost identical, which is exactly why students mix them up on exams. Let's lock in the difference for good. The short answer: a cation is a positively charged ion (an atom that lost electrons). An anion is a negatively charged ion (an atom that gained electrons). Cation = positive, anion = negative. Quick comparison at a glance Feature Cation Anion Charge Positive (+) Negative (−) How it forms Loses electrons Gains electrons Protons vs electrons More protons than electrons More electrons than protons Usually formed by Metals (+ NH₄⁺, H⁺) Nonmetals Size vs the original atom Smaller than the atom Larger than the atom Moves toward (in electrolysis) The cathode (−) The anode (+) Examples Na⁺, Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺, NH₄⁺ Cl⁻, O²⁻, OH⁻, SO₄²⁻ Everything below is just these rows explained — including a couple of tricks so you ...

What Is an Ion? Cations, Anions, and Charges

A sodium atom is a soft metal that explodes in water. A sodium ion is half of ordinary table salt — completely harmless. Same element, one tiny change. That change is what makes an ion , and it's behind salts, batteries, and the signals firing in your nerves right now. The short answer: an ion is an atom (or group of atoms) that has gained or lost one or more electrons , giving it an overall electric charge. Lose electrons → positive ion. Gain electrons → negative ion. What an ion actually is Remember that a neutral atom has equal numbers of protons (+) and electrons (−), so the charges cancel. An ion forms when that balance is broken — but only the electrons move. The protons never change. That last point matters: because the proton count stays the same, it's still the same element . A sodium ion is still sodium; it has just lost an electron and picked up a charge. Lose electrons → fewer negatives than positives → a positive ion (a cation ). Gain electrons → more...

Metals vs Nonmetals: What's the Difference?

Look at a periodic table and most of it is metals — but the small patch of nonmetals on the right side includes oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen, the elements life is made of. Telling the two groups apart is one of the first skills that makes the periodic table feel readable. The short answer: metals tend to be shiny, conduct electricity, bend without breaking, and lose electrons. Nonmetals tend to be dull, don't conduct, are brittle when solid, and gain or share electrons. On the periodic table, a zig-zag staircase line separates the metals (left and centre) from the nonmetals (upper right). Quick comparison at a glance Feature Metals Nonmetals Position on the table Left and centre (most of it) Upper right Appearance Shiny (lustrous) Dull Electrical/heat conductivity Good conductors Poor (insulators) When solid Malleable & ductile (bend, stretch) Brittle (shatter) State at room temperature Mostly solid (mercury is liquid) Gases, liquids, or ...