Search This Blog

Translate

Dipole Moment | Chemical Bonding Class 11

Dipole Moment | Chemical Bonding Class 11

Dipole Moment ($\mu$)

Polarity of Bonds & Molecules | Chemical Bonding

1. Definition & Formula

Dipole Moment ($\mu$): The product of the magnitude of the charge ($q$) and the distance of separation ($d$) between the centers of positive and negative charges.
$$ \mu = q \times d $$
  • It measures the degree of polarity in a covalent bond.
  • It is a Vector Quantity. Direction is from positive center ($\delta+$) to negative center ($\delta-$). (In chemistry convention, arrow points towards the more electronegative atom).

Units:

  • CGS: Debye (D).
  • SI: Coulomb-meter (C·m).
  • Conversion: $1 \, D = 3.33564 \times 10^{-30} \, C \cdot m$.

2. Dipole Moment & Molecular Geometry

The net dipole moment of a polyatomic molecule is the vector sum of all individual bond dipoles and lone pair dipoles.

A. Non-Polar Molecules ($\mu_{net} = 0$)

Symmetrical molecules where bond dipoles cancel each other out.

  • Linear: $CO_2, BeF_2$ (Dipoles equal and opposite).
  • Trigonal Planar: $BF_3, BCl_3$ (Resultant of two cancels the third).
  • Tetrahedral: $CH_4, CCl_4$.
  • Symmetrical trans-isomers: trans-1,2-dichloroethene.

B. Polar Molecules ($\mu_{net} \neq 0$)

Unsymmetrical molecules or those with lone pairs.

  • Bent/V-shape: $H_2O, SO_2$.
  • Pyramidal: $NH_3, PCl_3$.
  • Cis-isomers: cis-1,2-dichloroethene.

3. Important Comparison: $NH_3$ vs $NF_3$

Both are pyramidal with one lone pair. Fluorine is more electronegative than Nitrogen, yet $\mu_{NH_3} > \mu_{NF_3}$.

Molecule $NH_3$ $NF_3$
Direction of Bond Dipoles H $\to$ N (Towards N) N $\to$ F (Away from N)
Direction of LP Dipole Upwards (Away from N) Upwards (Away from N)
Resultant Vectors Add Up
(Reinforce each other)
Vectors Subtract
(Oppose each other)
Net Dipole High ($1.47 D$) Low ($0.23 D$)

4. Applications

A. Percentage Ionic Character

Calculated by comparing observed dipole moment with theoretical dipole moment (assuming 100% ionic).

$$ \% \text{ Ionic Character} = \frac{\mu_{observed}}{\mu_{calculated}} \times 100 $$

Where $\mu_{calc} = q \times d$ (Assuming $q = 1.6 \times 10^{-19} C$).

B. Distinguishing Isomers

  • Cis vs Trans: Generally $\mu_{cis} > \mu_{trans}$ ($\mu_{trans}$ often 0 for symmetric alkenes).
  • Ortho vs Meta vs Para: For disubstituted benzenes (like dichlorobenzene):
    $\mu_{ortho} (60^\circ) > \mu_{meta} (120^\circ) > \mu_{para} (180^\circ, \mu=0)$.

Practice Quiz

Test your knowledge on Dipole Moment.

Your Score: 0 / 10

© 2026 chemca-chemistry made easy

1 comment:

JEE Main and Advanced 2026 – Complete Guide, Syllabus, Exam Dates, and Strategy

  JEE Main and Advanced 2026 – Complete Guide, Syllabus, Exam Dates, and Strategy JEE Main and Advanced 2026 are two of the most...

Popular Posts