Well I think they are covalent bond because they need to give the odor in air but ionic bond has a very strong attraction force between its ions and won't be able to give that smell in the air.
air fresheners are covalent compounds because they give off a smell.
They are metallic containers full of a mixture of compounds.
Perfumes are solutions containing a number of dissolved compounds. In general these are covalent.
'Air' is a mixture of covalent molecules such as N2 O2 and CO2
chemicals
Covalent bonds themselves are not liquids or any other phase. The phase distinction between solids, liquids, and gases is a property of substances, not bonds. Compounds with covalent bonds are more likely to be liquid than ionic compounds because the inter-molecular forces are usually weaker in compounds with covalent bonds.
Ionic compounds have very strong forces holding them together, so the molecules wouldn't easily "break off" and float in the air, which is what you're smelling when you smell perfume.
No. Ionic compounds do not have a smell. Ionic compounds are solid, for smells to diffuse through the air they need to be gases. Ionic compounds are solids and its particles are held too tightly, therefore they cannot release into the air and make the smell.
Air fresheners contain compounds with low volatility.
'Air' is a mixture of covalent molecules such as N2 O2 and CO2
yes
Air fresheners can deplete ozone. If they contain depleting CFC's.
That "new car smell" is not air fresheners - it's the smell of chemicals in various compounds which bond the car and the interior together.
If you get close enough to where the spider is, yes air fresheners kill spiders.
Automatic air fresheners are a newer fad going on right now. Some of the main companies that make automatic air fresheners are Glade, and Air Wick. However, these air fresheners are not always the best choice.
Cl2 is covalent. NaCl is ionic.
No
chemicals
Bob Surloff
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