yes.
It is polar, not polor.
PCl3 has a pyramidal geometry, with three polar P-Cl bonds and one lone pair of electrons. Hence the molecule is polar.
PCl3 has more polar bonds than PF3 because chlorine is more electronegative than fluorine, resulting in greater electron density towards chlorine in PCl3.
The intermolecular force present in PCl3 is dipole-dipole interactions. This is because PCl3 is a polar molecule, with a net dipole moment due to the unequal sharing of electrons between phosphorus and chlorine atoms.
Phosphorus trichloride is not dissolved in water, a reaction of hydrolysis occur.
The compound name for PCl3 is phosphorus trichloride.
PCl3 is the chemical formula for phosphorous trichloride.
PCI3 involves polar covalent bonds. The difference in electronegativity between phosphorus and chlorine creates a partial negative charge on the chlorine atoms and a partial positive charge on the phosphorus atom, resulting in a polar molecule.
Yes, PCl6 is a polar molecule. While the individual P-Cl bonds are polar due to the electronegativity difference between phosphorus and chlorine, the overall molecular geometry of PCl6 (octahedral) results in a net dipole moment, making it a polar molecule.
BCl3 is non-polar. The B-Cl bonds are polar but the molecule is not. You should review shapes of molecules. Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion, VSEPR. Applying VSEPR on BCl3, we can find out that the shape of the molecule is trigonal planar. Due to its geometry, the bonds cancel out.
The products of the reaction of PCl3 with water are HCl and H3PO3 (phosphorous acid). The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: PCl3 + 3H2O → 3HCl + H3PO3
No, SCl4I2 is a nonpolar molecule. Even though it contains polar bonds between sulfur and iodine, the overall molecular geometry of the molecule is symmetrical, resulting in a net dipole moment of zero.