farts
The interparticle distance is greater in a gas than in a liquid, and greater in a liquid than in a solid.
The solid cannot float in this liquid.
Solid, because it goes through a longer process than the Liquid. Thus, the Liquid doesn't need as much energy as a solid.
Liquid A because the attraction between the particles in Liquid A are stronger than the particles in Liquid B . Answered By : BCP or CP (Nick Name From School)
no
solid :)
farts
it depends on the solid with which the liquid comes in contact, if the adhesion is stronger the liquid wets the solid else i t cannot ; eg;- in the case of water and glass the adhesion is much stronger than cohesion ,on the other hand the cohesion is greater if you consider the case of water and certain leaves(in which water cant wet them).
Yes,intermolecular forces are weaker in gas.Much stronger in solid
because you can pour a liquid but not a solid so therefore a liquid moves faster than a solid to get to the object it is required to get to.
Iodine has stronger intermolecular forces.
solid with hydrogen bonds making it less dense than its liquid form
That depends on the relative densities of the solid and the liquid. If the solid is denser than the liquid, the solid will sink. If the liquid is denser, the solid will float.
the buoyant force of the liquid on the solid is more than the buoyant force of the air on the solid.
Phosphorus pentachloride in the solid state exists as [PCl4+][PCl6-] so has an ionic lattice enthalpy and stronger intermolecular interaction than PCl3
Ice is a solid less dense than the liquid