Surface tension vs Average Bond Strength

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Increasing the surface tension of a liquid does affect the average bond strength, but the significance of this change varies with the surface-to-volume ratio. In bulk liquids like raindrops, the effect is minimal, while it becomes more pronounced in fine mists. For research on altering hydrogen bond strength in water, various solutes can modify surface tension without necessarily forming new hydrogen bonds. Further exploration can include studying hydrogen bonding in other liquids such as alcohols and organic acids, as well as examining the role of Lewis acids and bases. Acidic solutions tend to strengthen hydrogen bonds, while basic solutions weaken them, exemplified by ammonia's weak hydrogen bonds compared to the strong bonds in hydrogen fluoride.
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If you increase the surface tension of a liquid, does it change the average bond strength of the liquid?
 
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Yes. By very much? Depends on surface to volume ratio: for rain drops, bulk liquids, the effect isn't significant; for fine mists it is.
 
Thank you for replying on my posts. I was trying to find out how to change the strength of hydrogen bonds in water for my lab report, and since you mentioned surface tensions of aqueous solutions, I researched which solutions could change surface tension. Based from a quick search, there were a lot of solutes that could be added to water to change its surface tension, but doesn't necessarily cause hydrogen bond formation on the new mixture. How do I execute my research further?
 
Further? You can look at hydrogen bonding in other liquids (alcohols, organic acids, whatever). Three (?) center bonding in boranes. Lewis acids and bases (not necessarily hydrogen bonding, but another very similar effect).
 
it seems like acidic solutions strengthen hydrogen bonds while basic solutions weaken hydrogen bonds. for example, ammonia, a basic solution, has a very weak hydrogen bond while hydrogen fluoride, an acid, has a very strong bond. is this what you mean about lewis acids and bases?
 
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