The boiling point of ammonia at atmospheric pressure is -33.34oC.
102.9ºC
If you mean ammonia, the melting point of ammonia is −77.73 °C, and its boiling point is −33.34 °C. (Wikipedia)
options (A) Boiling point (b) Colour (C) Smell (D) Solubility in water.
The boiling point of freshwater is lower than the boiling point of saltwater.
I should point out that ammonium usually combines with chlorine in a one to one ratio, as ammonium chloride (NH4Cl), not ammonium dichloride (NH4Cl2).
102.9ºC
If you mean ammonia, the melting point of ammonia is −77.73 °C, and its boiling point is −33.34 °C. (Wikipedia)
103.6ºC
102.9°C For reals, dawg. Each formula unit of ammonium nitrate dissociates to form two particles, so the boiling point of water is raised 2.9°C.
Boiling is the phase where the boiling occurs. The point at which the boiling occurs is the boiling point.
options (A) Boiling point (b) Colour (C) Smell (D) Solubility in water.
you can separate it by looking at its boiling points for example: waters boiling point is about 100'C and ammonium nitrate is a solid so it has eather no boiling point, or a very high one, so an effective way of separating is to boil the mixture, you can use a distiller if you want the water too, but a pan is just fine. another way is to just let it sit and the mixture may settle at the bottem then just collect the water and let the slurry of ammonium nitrate dry, and then grind it back into a powder. *your welcome*
The boiling point of freshwater is lower than the boiling point of saltwater.
Ammonium chloride is decomposed by heating.
there is no boiling point
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What is the boiling point for calcium?