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1 m HCl is not more reactive than 4m HCl, but 4m HCl is more concentrated.
Halite does not react with HCl.
Al+HCl===> AlCl3+H2 Is the reaction. You need &.2 moles of HCl.
When Dilute HCL is added to water a more diluted solution of HCl is made.
100 M HCl don't exist.
It has dispersion forces, dipole dipole forces ,and hydrogen bonding. Source: I'm a chemistry professor
No
Strongest---------------> Weakest HI, HCl, H2S, H2O According to MasteringChemistry.com
HCL has a higher boiling point compared to HBr This is due to difference in electronegativity. H - 2.1 Cl - 3.0 Br - 2.8 The difference for HCl is 0.9, the difference for HBr is 0.7. The larger the difference in electronegavity means the stronger the bond. Large difference means greater attraction hence more energy is needed to overcome this bond.
Intermolecular forces are the forces between molecules which hold two or more of them together; intramolecular forces happen inside of the molecule, & are the forces holding the atoms together witch form the molecule.
HI has a higher boiling point because of the dipole-dipole Intermolecular forces as well as the dispersion forces, which become more evident with molecular weight, which will dominate over the dipole-dipole forces, so HCl has a lower boiloing point.
HCl. Hydrochloric acid.
H2SO3 is a weak acid, pKa=1.8, HCl is strong, pKa<<0
because it is held together by weak intermolecular forces
No, HClO4 is stronger.Note: molarity has nothing to do with strength.
In terms of acidity HI > HBr > HCl > HF
Strongest Acid is HCl. Then in order of acidic strength H2CO3 , NH3(solution) and finally NaOH. In words, Hydrochloric Acid ; pH = 1 Carbomic Acid ; pH ~ 5 Ammonia solutioon ; pH ~ 8 or 9 Sodium Hydroxide ; pH ~ 12