Temporary dipole moments and energy conservation

In summary, temporary dipole moments require energy to form. The energy comes from the thermal energy in the collection of atoms.
  • #1
Danyon
83
1
Do temporary dipole moments require energy to form? I'm talking about Van der walls and London forces. If temporary dipole moments don't require energy to form then consider the free electrons in a metal plate, temporary dipole forces in the metal act on the free electrons causing them to gain energy inside the metal, what stops the electrons in metal from gaining significant amounts of energy for free?
 
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  • #2
Danyon said:
Do temporary dipole moments require energy to form? I'm talking about Van der walls and London forces. If temporary dipole moments don't require energy to form then consider the free electrons in a metal plate, temporary dipole forces in the metal act on the free electrons causing them to gain energy inside the metal, what stops the electrons in metal from gaining significant amounts of energy for free?

The energy to form temporary dipole moments comes from the thermal energy in the collection of atoms, so basically collisions. Unless there is some particular reason why the temporary dipoles would align, they are randomly aligned throughout the sample and some electrons are hastened while others are slowed. The average electron has not gained any energy and the temperature remains constant.
 
  • #3
fzero said:
The energy to form temporary dipole moments comes from the thermal energy in the collection of atoms, so basically collisions.
There are phenomenons which work like this, but the London dispersion the OP was asking about is not of this nature. It is also there in pure wave function and at zero temperature, and has no relationship to thermal ensembles.

@OP: London dispersion can maybe be best imagined similarly to the resonance structures you might know from organic chemistry. The wave function of the molecule (even of a pure state at zero temperature) can be described by simultaneous linear combination of many different "resonance structures", which can be thought of as frozen combinations of electrons placed in specific orbitals. Even in molecules which do not have permanent dipole moments, some of the resonance structures which make up the full wave function, do have dipole moments. And if you have, for example, two interacting molecules, the resonance structures in which these "instantaneous" dipole moments are favourably aligned have a larger weight in the total two-molecule wave function than the configurations in which they do not.

However, it is important to stress that these "resonance structures" are not real wave functions, but only aspects of a single real wave function, which describes all electrons in the system at the same time. This single real wave function, and its time evolution, is still governed by the Schrödinger equation. Consequently, there is conservation of energy. If, for example, during time evolution of the single wave function,the weight of some of those "resonance structures" which make it up change, the weights must change in such a way that the total energy of the wave function stays constant (or, if there is an external driving force: stays consistent with the external energy input/drain).
In technical terms, what I called "resonance structure" here is called a "configuration", which can be made up of Slater determinants, Configuration State Functions, or other multi-electron wave functions (look up "Full Configuration Interaction"). Contrary to traditional resonance structures, in an quantitative description of these phenomena also energetically highly unfavourable configurations have to be considered (in fact, ALL possible distributions of electrons in orbitals, including very high lying orbitals, have to be considered in principle). Such things are done in higher wave function methods like Coupled Cluster or Configuration Interaction methods. If you want to read up on this: A good book to get a general feeling and intuition of how this works is "Electron Correlation in Molecules and Solids" of Peter Fulde.

One more terminology thing: "van der Waals" interactions is basically a catch-all term for "all kinds of weak inter-molecular interactions", and includes not only London dispersion (as described by the Casimir-Polder force and similar effects), but also electrostatic interactions (e.g., from permanent multipole moments), weak covalent intermolecular interactions (e.g., Hydrogen bonds) and so on. The term is sometimes assumed to be synonymous with the dispersion interaction, but this is not the standard definition.
 

Related to Temporary dipole moments and energy conservation

1. What is a temporary dipole moment?

A temporary dipole moment is a momentary separation of positive and negative charges within a molecule or atom, caused by the constantly moving electrons. This results in a temporary imbalance of charges, creating a temporary dipole moment.

2. How is energy conserved in temporary dipole moments?

Energy is conserved in temporary dipole moments because the movement of the electrons is constantly exchanging energy with the surrounding molecules. As a result, the overall energy of the system remains constant.

3. Can temporary dipole moments be induced?

Yes, temporary dipole moments can be induced by an external electric field or by the presence of nearby polar molecules. This can cause the temporarily separated charges to align with the external field, creating a larger dipole moment.

4. How do temporary dipole moments affect intermolecular forces?

Temporary dipole moments play a crucial role in intermolecular forces, such as London dispersion forces, which are caused by the temporary dipoles of non-polar molecules. In polar molecules, temporary dipole moments can also contribute to stronger intermolecular forces such as dipole-dipole interactions.

5. Can temporary dipole moments be observed experimentally?

Yes, temporary dipole moments can be observed experimentally using techniques such as spectroscopy and molecular modeling. These methods allow scientists to observe the changes in charge distribution and measure the strength of temporary dipole moments in different molecules.

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