CHEM 1A Lecture Notes - Lecture 16: Hydrophobe, Protein Folding, Electronegativity

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Nonpolar molecules have a 0 average dipole, but individual measurements have dipoles. Correlated dipole fluctuations give attraction even between nonpolar molecules. Dispersion forces are strongest between molecules that are highly polarized atoms or molecules. Larger molecules are easier to polarize bc they have more electrons and more contact area, so they exert stronger dispersion forces. O-h, n-h, and f-h bonds are hydrogen bonds because h has low electronegativity and o, h, and f are all highly electronegative. Since h is very small, another molecules can get v close to h atoms, the smaller the distance between atoms, the bigger the attraction between them. This extreme version of polar attraction yields a hydrogen bond worth abt 20kj/mol, strong but noncovalent. A fluctuating network of h-bonds determines many of water"s physical properties. Proteins" 3d structures feature many h-bonds and can h-bond w the water molecules around it.

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