Why does CH3OCH3 have a higher BP than CH3CN

194 views

Been looking all across the internet but there doesn’t seem to be a straight answer (used a few chat bots too). CH3CN has the higher potential for making bonds with 2 addition dipole bonds on C and 3 possible H-bond on N but it has a smaller BP than CH3OCH3 even though it can only make an additional 2 H-bonds. Why though when the size of atoms and length of bonds are similar? Shouldn’t the more possible H-bond make it stronger?

In: 0

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Hydrogen atoms have to be DIRECTLY connected to nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine for hydrogen bonding to occur. Just because hydrogen exists alongside another nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine doesn’t mean there’s hydrogen bonding. In both these molecules, all the hydrogens are directly bonded to carbon atoms.

You are viewing 1 out of 2 answers, click here to view all answers.