The more strongly a liquid bonds to itself, the more energy is needed to convert it into the gas phase. Because water is more cohesive as a liquid due to hydrogen bonding, more heat energy is carried away by water molecules that evaporate.
3 bonds
Bicarb, more correctly called bicarbonate of soda or sodium bicarbonate, is itself a chemical with the formula NaHCO3. The elements in sodium bicarbonate are sodium, carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen.
The cause is the formation of hydrogen bonds between water molecules.Any hydrophilic molecule that dissolves in water make H-bonding with water molecules
Hydrogen is an element and an energy source itself.
Intramolecular H-bonding is hydrogen bonding that happens within one molecule. Hydrogen bonding is a very polar bond between a hydrogen atom and a highly electronegative atom, such as N, O, or F. If the solute is placed in a polar solvent, it will be very soluble, because it itself is polar. If the solute is placed in a nonpolar solvent it will not be very soluble.
Hydrogen Bonding
Hydrogen bonding :]
Within the molecule itself, water exhibits ionic bonding. Between the water molecules, there is hydrogen bonding.
3 bonds
Actually, water, by hydrogen bonding with itself and not the nonpolar substances excludes the nonpolar substances from hydrogen bonding and turns them into associations with each other. Natural water can hydrogen bond with many polar and charged substances.
because hydrogen likes to likes to bond with anything even itself. It is a atom that can do that because it is so unique in it's strength, atomic mass, and charge
interaction with water, dipole dipole interaction, within the phospholipid itself covalent
Bicarb, more correctly called bicarbonate of soda or sodium bicarbonate, is itself a chemical with the formula NaHCO3. The elements in sodium bicarbonate are sodium, carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen.
Strong polar attractions between molecules involving H, F, O, and N ~APEX
The cause is the formation of hydrogen bonds between water molecules.Any hydrophilic molecule that dissolves in water make H-bonding with water molecules
Hydrogen (hydrocarbons) Oxygen (co, co2) Carbon also bonds to itself quite well (diamond, graphite) I'm not sure if you could count carbon bonding to itself as the third but I would.
NH3(ammonia) is a polar molecule. The molecular structure is trigonal pyramidal, which makes the nitrogen stick out from the hydrogen. This causes H2O(also polar) to attract itself to the ammonia, hydrogen with nitrogen and oxygen with hydrogen. This attraction, called hydrogen bonding, gives NH3 its water-soluble property.