It has a dipole moment.Thats because it has a lone pair
NH3 is polar compound.So dipole moment is not zero.
NH3 is an asymmetrical compound.So it is exhibits.
NH3 is not symmetrical.So it has a dipole moment
NI3 does not exist. If NH3 is meant then the answer is: yes it has a dipole moment (like OH2, or better H2O)
nh3-nh3 because they are both polar molecules
NH3 is polar compound.So dipole moment is not zero.
NH3 is an asymmetrical compound.So it is exhibits.
NH3 is not symmetrical.So it has a dipole moment
NI3 does not exist. If NH3 is meant then the answer is: yes it has a dipole moment (like OH2, or better H2O)
This is because in ammonia the direction of resultant dipole is towards lone pair and hence it has high dipole moment but in case of NF3 the direction of resultant dipole moment is opposite to the lone pair and hence the dipole moment gets less.
nh3-nh3 because they are both polar molecules
Dipole dipole forces
A dipole moment is defined as the mathematical product of the separation of the ends of a dipole and the magnitude of the charges. Dipole moments are created by the separation of charge over a molecule. Some common molecules with dipoles are H2O, HF, NH3, etc...
An overall dipole moment is H2S.
The dipole moment of Glucose is 1.8
no dipole moment
dispersion, dipole-dipole, and hydrogen bonding forces