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Solid state matter has maximum intermolecular force.
Boiling point is a property not a force; but a high boiling point indicate a strong intermolecular force.
Sodium react with water, any intermolecular force between sodium and water.
Intermolecular attraction
The common force is only the Vander-Waal's force.
IBr
crytsal
IBr
The name of IBr is iodine monobromide.
Bromine-Br Iodine-I iodine monobromide (IBr) Made by direct combination of the elements
iodine pentabromide technically would be IBr5 but it doesn't exist. iodine monobromide's chemical formula is IBr though.
Iodine has stronger intermolecular forces.
No, covalency does not have its own intermolecular force
3IBr + 4NH3 --> NI3 + 3NH4Br
Because size of iodine is greatest among all halogens.So, it has greater polerizability and has very strong intermolecular force
It depends. If Fluorine is bonded to Hydrogen then it would be greater, having present Hydrogen Bonding-the strongest Intermolecular Force. Iodine,I2, has many more electrons than fluorine, F2,so London dispersion forces are much stronger explaining why fluorine is a gas and iodine is a solid under standard conditions.
London Force