QUESTION IMAGE
Question
what force in liquids causes surface tension?
covalent forces
intermolecular forces
intramolecular forces
ionic forces
done
Brief Explanations
To determine the force causing surface tension in liquids, we analyze each option:
- Covalent forces are within a molecule (e.g., bonding atoms in a molecule), not between molecules, so they don't cause surface tension.
- Intermolecular forces are the forces between molecules. In liquids, the cohesive intermolecular forces (like hydrogen bonding, dipole - dipole, or London dispersion forces) between liquid molecules at the surface pull the surface molecules inward, creating surface tension.
- Intramolecular forces are the forces within a molecule (e.g., covalent bonds holding atoms in a molecule together) and do not act between different molecules to create surface tension.
- Ionic forces are a type of intramolecular or inter - ionic (in ionic compounds) force and are not the primary force for surface tension in most liquids (which are often molecular, not ionic).
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B. intermolecular forces