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Three factors affected during a phase change would be temperature, pressure and intermolecular forces/internal energy.
The three rules of matter are - 1. The particles of matter have space between them known as intermolecular spaces 2. The particles of matter attract to each other which are known as the forces of intermolecular attraction . The forces that attract to same particles are known as cohesive forces and the forces which attract to different types of matter are called adhesive forces 3.The particles of matter are made up of small small particles
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The three you may be looking for are covalent bonds, Ionic bonds and intermolecular forces. Covalent bonds are between atoms and they share electrons. An example is O2 where 4 electrons are shared between the two atoms. Ionic bonds occur between atoms and one atom takes the electrons from the other such as NaCl. Cl takes one electron from Na so both follow the octet rule. Intermolecular forces include dispersion forces, hydrogen bonding and dipole dipole interactions. In intermolecular forces the electrons in an atom are dispereded within the electron cloud in a way that a positive and negative region can occur in an atom at anyone time and anywhere. A popular example is hydrogen bonding in water. Water is H2O. The O is more electronegative which will keeps electron close to it even from hydrogen. This allows the O atom to bee negative and the H atoms to be positive. Opposites attract and the positive end of one molecule attracts to the negative O of another molecule.
Ammonia form hydrogen bonds.
There are three: -London Dispersion -Hydrogen Bonding (Hydrogen is connected to Nitrogen) -Dipole-Dipole
Of CO2, CS2 and CSe2, CO2 is the smallest molecule whereas CSe2 is the largest molecule. The same pattern exists in the strength of the intermolecular forces. All three are linear, non polar molecules.
Three factors affected during a phase change would be temperature, pressure and intermolecular forces/internal energy.
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Well, a crystal is solid. If you mean, are ionic bonds stronger than covalent bonds, then the answer would be almost always. With a few exceptions, the ionic bond has a greater intermolecular force than a covalent bond. One exception might be a diamond and a weak ionic compound like RbBr.
no you can tell by their boiling points because water has stronger hydrogen bonding (intermolecular forces) it has a higher heat capacity and boiling point at 100 degrees Celsius while isopropyl has a lower boiling point
The three rules of matter are - 1. The particles of matter have space between them known as intermolecular spaces 2. The particles of matter attract to each other which are known as the forces of intermolecular attraction . The forces that attract to same particles are known as cohesive forces and the forces which attract to different types of matter are called adhesive forces 3.The particles of matter are made up of small small particles
covalent (peptide) bond and hydrogen bonding
Intermolecular Hydrogen bonding because hydrogen ion is less electronegativeand Oxygen ion is more electronegative.Dr.Chandramauly Sharma(drcrsharma@in.com)
The answer lies in what is know as intermolecular forces. There three basic types: london dispersion forces (which all molecules have), dipole to dipole forces and hydrogen bonding. The stronger these forces the more the molecules have a tendancy to stick together. I listed the forces from weakest to strongest. Since water has hydrogen bonding its intermolecukar forces are the strongest and over powers the atmospheric forces and energies trying to tear the molecules away from eachother. Ammonias intermolecular forces are not strong enough under normal temperature and pressure so the molecules and individual gas molecules.
Mis- is a three-letter prefix meaning an error or mistake.