Understanding Hydrogen Bonding in Ethanol Molecules

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Ethanol molecules can form hydrogen bonds due to the presence of two lone pairs on the oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom that can donate a bond. While hydrogen fluoride (HF) typically forms only one hydrogen bond per molecule due to its strong dipole, ethanol's structure allows for the formation of two hydrogen bonds on average. The oxygen atom's negative charge, influenced by the ethyl group's +I effect, enhances its ability to participate in bonding. Each ethanol molecule can thus form two hydrogen bonds: one lone pair on the oxygen accepts a bond from another molecule, while one hydrogen atom donates a bond to another molecule's lone pair. This results in an average of two hydrogen bonds per ethanol molecule, clarifying the bonding behavior in contrast to HF.
Psychae
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Hey,

How do you know how many hydrogen bonds ethanol molecules will form with each other? I know there are 3 sites where H bonds could form (2 lone pairs on oxygen and the hydrogen) but with something like hydrogen fluoride, each molecule only forms 1 H bond on average so shouldn't something similar happen with ethanol since each has only one hydrogen bond to 'donate'?

Thanks :)
 
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Check the definition of Hydrogen Bonding at wikipedia. H-Bonding is a special, stronger case of dipole-dipole attraction. The bond is slightly polarized, which may be seen as an electric dipole of some small "charge".

In HF, F has slight negative "charge" and H has an equivalent positive "charge", so F only forms one H-Bond.

But in Ethanol, O has more negative charge than H has positive charge (Ethyl group has +I effect) so overall, O-atom can enough polarization to form two H-Bond.
 
Thanks for replying :) I've just read Wikipedia's entry but I think I must still be missing something :/

I understand the +I effect and how the O-atom can form two H-bonds, but the H-atom also forms a H-bond with an O lone pair on another ethanol doesn't it? So does that mean each molecule forms 3 H-bonds then? :S
 
You may check this figure. It says something else.
800px-Ethanol-xtal-1976-3D-balls.png
 
Yeah I mean I know that my idea of how it might bond is wrong but I'm just not sure of exactly what makes it different :confused:

So in your picture, for one molecule of ethanol (on average): one lone pair on the O-atom 'accepts' a H-bond from another molecule, and one of it's H-atoms 'donates' a H-bond to another molecule's lone pair, giving 2 H-bonds per molecule?

I just want to check that's right first :)
 
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