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Interactions during chemical bonding intermolecular

The above-mentioned decrease in the PMS content for the fresh samples from the BTG plant could be due to the decay of unstable radicals formed by breaking of chemical bonds during pyrolysis. However, a persistence of the ESR spectrum line width and shape suggests that the paring of a part of PMS through the rt-conjugation system or by intermolecular interaction may also take place [7]. [Pg.1174]

The saturation coverage during chemisorption on a clean transition-metal surface is controlled by the formation of a chemical bond at a specific site [5] and not necessarily by the area of the molecule. In addition, in this case, the heat of chemisorption of the first monolayer is substantially higher than for the second and subsequent layers where adsorption is via weaker van der Waals interactions. Chemisorption is often useful for measuring the area of a specific component of a multi-component surface, for example, the area of small metal particles adsorbed onto a high-surface-area support [6], but not for measuring the total area of the sample. Surface areas measured using this method are specific to the molecule that chemisorbs on the surface. Carbon monoxide titration is therefore often used to define the number of sites available on a supported metal catalyst. In order to measure the total surface area, adsorbates must be selected that interact relatively weakly with the substrate so that the area occupied by each adsorbent is dominated by intermolecular interactions and the area occupied by each molecule is approximately defined by van der Waals radii. This... [Pg.1869]

Two species combine to form a complex in water if the sum of the intermolecular forces between them more than olfsets the sum of the loss of favorable interactions with solvent and any unfavorable interactions that develop between solutes during complex formation. Collectively the interactions between non-bonded species are referred to as cohesive forces, defined as those forces lost when the species are transferred to infinite separation in the gas phase. While it is common to classify chemical forces as covalent or non-covalent, the interactions are fundamentally the same only the magnitude of the interactions varies. Cohesive, non-specific forces are weak compared to covalent interactions typically we consider cohesive forces as those forces with strengths less than 1% of covalent bond strengths. We will see, however, that this definition is somewhat arbitrary and in fact a continuum of interaction energies exists. [Pg.864]


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Bond interactions

Bonded interactions

Bonding interactions

Chemical interaction

Intermolecular bonding

Intermolecular bonding bonds

Intermolecular bonds

Intermolecular interaction

Intermolecular interaction chemical bonding

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