Yes, hydrogen diffuses faster than methane. The hydrogen molecule, H2, is the smallest of all molecules and it is considerably smaller than the methane molecule, CH4. Smaller molecules move faster, and therefore diffuse faster, at any given temperature, than larger molecules.
Helium diffuses twice faster as Methane does.
why does Co2 diffuse faster than So2
In hot water molecule were moving around faster so substances diffuse faster than in cold water.
yes :p
The rate of diffusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of the molar mass of that gas. So, lighter gases will diffuse faster than heavier gases. The molar mass for N2 gas is 28 g/mole and that for Cl2 gas is about 71 g/mol, so N2 will diffuse faster.
Helium diffuses twice faster as Methane does.
why does Co2 diffuse faster than So2
Not much faster, but it does diffuse faster than helium because it is lighter.
In hot water molecule were moving around faster so substances diffuse faster than in cold water.
If the blue ink is the kind you use in your desktop printer, the ink will diffuse faster. The kind of ink they use to print newspapers will never diffuse.
Yes
The atomic bonds of gas particles are much weaker than that of liquids, allowing them to diffuse faster
Methane
yes, a substance of high molecular weight will diffuse faster than a substance of lower molecular weight since the molecules will absorb the liquid and easily soak the other molecules,all round,hence diffuse faster
CO2 is much smaller than SO2
Methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water ice is most of it - more methane than anything else.
yes :p