Ammonia is molecular (or covalent) compound because the bond between N and H in ammonia is formed by the sharing of electrons between N and H.
Ammonia is a molecular compound. The hydrogen atoms share electrons with the nitrogen atom.
Ammonia is NH3.
The chemical formula of ammonia is NH3; the solution in water is basic - NH4OH. The molecule NH3 is polar. Ammonia is not an element but a chemical compound.
Ammonia and nitrogen are two distinct compounds, not a single compound that would have a molecular formula.
Ammonium hydroxide is a compound formed from the combination of ammonia (NH3) and water (H2O). While it is often referred to as ammonium hydroxide, it is more accurately described as an aqueous solution of ammonia in water rather than a molecular compound.
Ammonia is a molecular compound. It consists of individual molecules made up of covalently bonded atoms (one nitrogen and three hydrogen). It does not contain ions like in ionic compounds.
Ammonia is a molecular compound. The hydrogen atoms share electrons with the nitrogen atom.
It can be either. For example sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is a base that is ionic while ammonia (NH3) is a base that is molecular.
Ammonia is NH3.
The chemical formula of ammonia is NH3; the solution in water is basic - NH4OH. The molecule NH3 is polar. Ammonia is not an element but a chemical compound.
Ammonia and nitrogen are two distinct compounds, not a single compound that would have a molecular formula.
Ionic Molecular
Ammonium hydroxide is a compound formed from the combination of ammonia (NH3) and water (H2O). While it is often referred to as ammonium hydroxide, it is more accurately described as an aqueous solution of ammonia in water rather than a molecular compound.
17 g/mol is the molecular mass of ammonia NH3.
ionic
Molecular
molecular