Hydrogen Bond Definition
A hydrogen bond is a type of attractive (dipole-dipole) interaction
between an electronegative atom and a hydrogen atom bonded to another
electronegative atom. This bond always involves a hydrogen atom. Hydrogen bonds
can occur between molecules or within parts of a single molecule.
A hydrogen bond tends to be stronger than van der Waals
forces, but weaker than covalent bonds or ionic bonds. It is about 1/20th (5%) the
strength of the covalent bond formed between O-H. However, even this weak bond
is strong enough to withstand slight temperature fluctuation.
But the Atoms Are Already Bonded
How can hydrogen be attracted to another atom when it is
already bonded? In a polar bond, one side of the bond still exerts a slight
positive charge, while the other side has a slightly negative electrical charge.
Forming a bond doesn't neutralize the electrical nature of the participant
atoms.
Examples of Hydrogen Bonds
Hydrogen bonds are found in nucleic acids between base pairs
and between water molecules. This type of bond also forms between hydrogen and
carbon atoms of different chloroform molecules, between hydrogen and nitrogen
atoms of neighboring ammonia molecules, between repeating subunits in the
polymer nylon, and between hydrogen and oxygen in acetylacetone. Many organic
molecules are subject to hydrogen bonds. Hydrogen bond:
Help bind transcription factors to DNA
Aid antigen-antibody binding
Organize polypeptides into secondary structures, such as
alpha helix and beta sheet
Hold together the two strands of DNA
Bind transcription factors to each other
Hydrogen Bonding in Water
Although hydrogen bonds form between hydrogen and any other
electronegative atom, the bonds within the water are the most ubiquitous (and
some would argue, the most important). Hydrogen bonds form between neighboring
water molecules when the hydrogen of one atom comes between the oxygen atoms of
its own molecule and that of its neighbor. This happens because the hydrogen
atom is attracted to both its own oxygen and other oxygen atoms that come close
enough. The oxygen nucleus has 8 "plus" charges, so it attracts
electrons better than the hydrogen nucleus, with its single positive charge. So,
neighbor oxygen molecules are capable of attracting hydrogen atoms from other
molecules, forming the basis of hydrogen bond formation.
The total number of hydrogen bonds formed between water
molecules is 4. Each water molecule can form 2 hydrogen bonds between oxygen
and the two hydrogen atoms in the molecule. An additional two bonds can be
formed between each hydrogen atom and nearby oxygen atoms.
A consequence of hydrogen bonding is that hydrogen bonds
tend to arrange in a tetrahedron around each water molecule, leading to the
well-known crystal structure of snowflakes. In liquid water, the distance
between adjacent molecules is more significant and the energy of the molecules
is high enough that hydrogen bonds are often stretched and broken. However, even
liquid water molecules average out to a tetrahedral arrangement. Because of
hydrogen bonding, the structure of liquid water becomes ordered at a lower
temperature, far beyond that of other liquids. Hydrogen bonding holds water
molecules about 15% closer than if the bonds weren't present. The bonds are the
primary reason water displays exciting and unusual chemical properties.
Hydrogen bonding reduces extreme temperature shifts near
large bodies of water.
Hydrogen bonding allows animals to cool themselves using
perspiration because such a large amount of heat is needed to break hydrogen
bonds between water molecules.
Hydrogen bonding keeps water in its liquid state over a
wider temperature range than for any other comparable-sized molecule.
The bonding gives water an exceptionally high heat of
vaporization, which means considerable thermal energy is needed to change
liquid water into water vapor.
Hydrogen bonds within the heavy water are even stronger than
those within ordinary water made using normal hydrogen (protium). Hydrogen
bonding in tritiated water is stronger still.
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