Iodine is bound together by van der Waals forces.
An iodine molecule is held together by covalent bonds
yes it is - gentle warming will change it to vapor though.
NaCl is ionically bonded with stong electrostatic attractions whereas Cl2 only has weak Van Der Waals' forces acting between the molecules More strength is needed to break NaCl's bonds than CL2's bonds. Therefore, NaCl is solid and Cl2 is a gas Hope this helps :)
These are polar forces, intermolecular forces of attraction between molecules.
Dipole forces and London forces are present as intermolecular forces in these molecules.
An iodine molecule is held together by covalent bonds
To melt solid I2, one must overcome the covalent bonds holding the molecules together.
yes it is - gentle warming will change it to vapor though.
NaCl is ionically bonded with stong electrostatic attractions whereas Cl2 only has weak Van Der Waals' forces acting between the molecules More strength is needed to break NaCl's bonds than CL2's bonds. Therefore, NaCl is solid and Cl2 is a gas Hope this helps :)
These are polar forces, intermolecular forces of attraction between molecules.
Dipole forces and London forces are present as intermolecular forces in these molecules.
These are intermolecular forces.
Intramolecular forces are not intermolecular forces !
The intermolecular forces in acetone are weaker.
hydrogen bonding
Intermolecular forces in C3CH2CH2NH2London disperiondipole-dipolehydrogen-bonding forces
The weakest of the four forces is gravity by a huge margin