16

From what I've read online, when a substance undergoes a state change, the intermolecular forces are broken. The covalent bonds are not broken (http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/add_ocr_pre_2011/chemicals/airmolecularrev2.shtml)

My textbook states that layers of graphite can slide over one another easily and can break of one another as they have weak intermolecular forces.

I thought that if an object has weak intermolecular forces, its melting point is lower. Why does graphite have such a high melting point if its intermolecular forces are weak?

My textbook also states that the strong covalent bonds are broken during state changes, isn't this incorrect?

Christopher U
  • 339
  • 1
  • 2
  • 8

2 Answers2

22

It's not usual to consider graphite as a material composed of "molecules" in the typical sense, though it could be viewed as a kind of polymer with two-dimensional macromolecules. Regardless, it is fruitful to analyse the individual sheets in graphite as the limit of increasingly large polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The sequence goes: benzene ($\ce{C6H6}$) → coronene ("superbenzene", $\ce{C24H12}$) → $\ce{C54H18}$ → ...

The main kind of intermolecular interaction relevant to this sequence of compounds is pi-stacking. For the smallest example in the sequence, benzene, it appears that the strength of this intermolecular interaction is only about $\mathrm{10\ kJ\ mol^{-1}}$. This represents only a modest attraction; a hydrogen bond can easily be twice as strong even though it involves less atoms. In this sense, when "normalised" by the number of atoms taking part, pi-stacking is indeed a comparatively weak intermolecular interaction.

Furthermore, $\mathrm{10\ kJ\ mol^{-1}}$ is comparable to the average thermal energy of particles in ambient conditions ($\mathrm{k_BT_{amb}=2.5\ kJ\ mol^{-1}}$), so it doesn't take too much effort to pull apart benzene molecules. Indeed, benzene melts at $\mathrm{5.5\ ^oC}$ and boils at $\mathrm{80\ ^oC}$ under one atmosphere.

However, the next compound in the sequence, coronene, already melts at $\mathrm{437\ ^oC}$ and boils at $\mathrm{525\ ^oC}$. Larger PAHs would almost certainly have even greater values, eventually reaching the limit of graphite, which melts around $\mathrm{4000\ ^oC}$ under pressure. The type of intermolecular interaction hasn't changed, so why are these molecules suddenly so difficult to pull apart? The answer comes from realising that, though individual sections of each molecule interact weakly, the sum of many weak intermolecular interactions over an entire molecule leads to a very strong intermolecular interaction overall.

Crudely speaking, imagine that each individual aromatic ring contributes $\mathrm{10\ kJ\ mol^{-1}}$ worth of intermolecular attraction. Coronene contains 7 fused aromatic rings, which would lead to a total interaction of $\mathrm{70\ kJ\ mol^{-1}}$ between two molecules. As the molecules get larger, this value increases further and further. Eventually the total intermolecular interaction between two very large PAH molecules becomes enormous. For the substance to liquefy, it is only necessary to "break" a fraction of these intermolecular interactions (breaking all of them is turning the material into a gas), but even a small fraction eventually represents a huge amount of energy, so melting only happens at very high temperatures.

It is interesting to note how often chemists make the mistake of neglecting weak long-distance interactions (e.g. van der Waals), especially in the presence of stronger ones. For example, van der Waals interactions are fundamental to the stability of alkyl-substituted hexaphenylethane derivatives. In proteins, weak interactions are often overlooked in favour of hydrogen bonding ($\alpha$-helices and $\beta$-sheets), though they can be decisive in determining the correct conformation of an enzyme or how a protein interact with medicinal compounds.

As a last slight tangent, I just want to point out that in undergraduate-level chemistry, often one finds statements such as "boiling points for covalent compounds increase with their molecular weight. Now it should be evident this is not strictly true. It merely happens that compounds with higher molecular weights tend to be larger and allow a greater amount of intermolecular interactions per molecule, thus leading to higher boiling points.

Nicolau Saker Neto
  • 28,697
  • 4
  • 92
  • 141
  • If we take graphene layers as the limiting case of PAH's then the graphenes layers couldn't slip (we know graphite is a good lubricant). How can your explanation be compatible with this fact? Also, the layers are not stacked above each other but are slighlty off. – Anton Jan 30 '22 at 21:23
  • @Anton I'm not sure I understand your lack of slipping argument. Even though the sum of the intermolecular forces between two macroscopic graphene layers is very large, if you were to slip the sheets against each other by the width of a few atoms, then almost all the atoms from both sheets are still in contact (only the edges are dangling - in fact, they would curl on themselves), so this state is only very slightly higher in energy. You can apply this same argument over and over. This requires very much less energy than necessary to liquefy - think defect propagation in solids. – Nicolau Saker Neto Jan 31 '22 at 07:26
  • So they are slippery because we can move them a little bit each time. So if we try to separate them vertically which is equivalent to break all the interactions at the same time it would be difficult right (even though the final states are of similary energy)? – Anton Jan 31 '22 at 19:00
  • @Anton Yes, the sheets are slippery because they can move past each other with almost no energy change (especially considering a single unsupported sheet can easily roll itself up) and also importantly almost no energy barrier. Peeling the sheets apart by pulling perpendicularly to the surface is comparatively much harder (this would result in a very different final state with considerably higher energy if the sheets are pulled apart in a vacuum). The scotch tape method to make graphene is more complicated, because you have to consider the interactions between graphene and glue. – Nicolau Saker Neto Jan 31 '22 at 23:04
12

Graphite has got a structure similar to books stacked on top of each other. Multiple layers on top of each other and each layer going by the name graphene. Atoms in each individual layer is covalently bonded, which is quite strong. Remember covalent bond is the one that holds diamond together, which is one of the hardest substances. Atoms in the individual layers of graphite are strongly held with only three of the four potential bonding sites satisfied. The fourth electron is free to migrate in the plane, making graphite electrically conductive. However, the different layers are held together by weak van der Waal forces, which enables them to slide on top of each other, making graphite a good lubricant.enter image description here Now melting is essentially turning a highly ordered state of molecules to a disorderly one. That comes at an expense of energy. In this case, since the constituent molecules of graphite are held together by a strong covalent force, a high amount of energy is needed to weaken that bond. That explains graphite's high melting point.

abirbhav
  • 144
  • 1
  • 5
  • Thanks a lot. Maybe my teacher has taught me wrong, but doesn't melting involve breaking down of intermolecular forces? I read that when something simple like water boils, the intermolecular forces break down, and the covalent bonds do not. Is this correct? – Christopher U Jan 16 '19 at 06:24
  • 3
    This answer starts off well, but I'm afraid it reaches the correct conclusion by an incorrect argument. The covalent bonds within each sheet are not really relevant to the melting point. If the covalent bonds broke or changed, the compound wouldn't melt, it would decompose. – Nicolau Saker Neto Jan 16 '19 at 07:11
  • @NicolauSakerNeto but graphite is already in elemental form. What would it decompose to? – Gimelist Jan 16 '19 at 08:19
  • @ChristopherU'Ren Yes. Melting involves breaking of intermolecular forces. We know water molecules in ice are held together by hydrogen bonds, which is the intermolecular force in this case. However in graphite, the molecules are carbon atoms themselves. These "molecules" are held together by covalent bonds, which plays the role of intermolecular bond in here. Melting/sublimating graphite involves breaking these bonds. – abirbhav Jan 16 '19 at 08:21
  • 2
    @Gimelist After some reflection, I realise the melting of covalent network solids must involve the breakage of covalent bonds. This is in stark contrast with molecular materials, where breaking covalent bonds is necessarily some chemical transformation. In some sense, the melting of a covalent network solid is a kind of decomposition, except that the original structure is recovered during freezing. – Nicolau Saker Neto Jan 16 '19 at 10:17
  • @ChristopherU'Ren Unless you're doing graduate studies, the standard teaching method is to simplify everything and pretty much lie most of the time (but not in a big way). Water in liquid form is held together by a combination of atmospheric pressure and inter-molecular forces. To boil it, you need to disrupt either of the two (or both). Both decreasing pressure and increasing temperature will make individual molecules more likely to escape as gas (and less likely to condense back again - don't forget water constantly evaporates and condenses back, as do all liquids). – Luaan Jan 16 '19 at 10:19
  • (cont.) In this view, Abirbhav is right; the strong covalent bonds of graphite are fundamental to its high melting point. However, this is only true because the (non-covalent) intermolecular interactions are so strong in the first place that it actually becomes more viable to break the molecules down during melting rather than making them slip against eachother whole. – Nicolau Saker Neto Jan 16 '19 at 10:20
  • @ChristopherU'Ren But water isn't graphite. The sheets are in a sense "one molecule" - we're talking about "intramolecular bonds" there. It's similar with metals - again, it's not just a mix of individual molecules, metals form large crystals that are essentially huge molecules. To melt them, you need to break the far stronger bonds between the atoms. And even with water, don't confuse liquid water and ice. Ice again forms crystals, where the molecules stick together rather strongly than in liquid water, which has the intermolecular bonds continually break and reform. – Luaan Jan 16 '19 at 10:23
  • @NicolauSakerNeto This is always true when dealing with elemental substances, of course - it doesn't matter if it's graphite, iron or solid oxygen (though oxygen will quickly form dioxygen molecules as it melts - it's a lower energy configuration). Still, the first thing that breaks are the "crystals" - it's just that the strength difference between the "edge" and "centre" in a graphite sheet is far smaller than the difference between the bonds between water molecules in ice and the bonds between individual atoms in the water molecules. If there was no difference, we'd only have monocrystals. – Luaan Jan 16 '19 at 10:29
  • @Luaan I understand what you're getting at, but I feel there is a qualitative difference. A covalent network solid can have bonds which are both highly directional and localised. This differs from metals and ionic solids, for example, where bonding is extended over a large volume and is less directional. – Nicolau Saker Neto Jan 16 '19 at 10:37