The molecules in a solid have less energy than those in gases and liquids. They vibrate about fixed positions. Their inter molecular forces are very strong compared to liquids and gases.
When molecules are linked in organized positions has solid results. When heat is absorbed by a solid the molecules vibrate faster and faster.
The molecules in a solid vibrate in place. The molecules of a liquid are moving about.
When a solid dissolves in a solvent, the intermolecular forces holding the molecules in the solid lattice break. The solvent molecules surround the solute molecules, causing them to separate and disperse evenly throughout the solvent. The solute molecules become completely surrounded by solvent molecules in a process called solvation.
solid have many molecules
In solid, the molecules r tightly packed by intermolecular forces, but in gas these forces r very loose.
solid. In a solid, the molecules are tightly packed together and have minimal movement compared to liquids and gases.
Molecules in a solid are constantly vibrating. Heating a solid increases the vibration of the molecules. Solids stay fixed because of the attraction between their molecules. This can be broken by increasing heat and therefore vibration to the point of inducing a phase change.
Hydrate: a solid compound that contains water molecules as a part of the solid crystalline structure
In any solid the particles have bonds holding the atoms together into molecules, and bonds (or forces) holding the molecules together to form the solid.
Molecules at zero will not be gas anymore. Molecules will then become a solid.
molecules that start closing together turn into solid example: think of water, when molecules are loose the water is liquid but when the molecules are packed together the water turns into ice
Molecules in a liquid move faster than in a solid because the intermolecular forces in a liquid are weaker, allowing molecules to move around more freely. In a solid, molecules are held tightly in a fixed position by strong intermolecular forces.