No Florine, Nitrogen, Oxygen = no hydrogen bonding
Covalent and ionic bonds are not intermolecular
The C-Cl bonds are polar and the bond dipoles do not cancel each other therfore it has a permanent dipole and there will be dipole -dipole interactions
There will also be London dispersion forces
Dichloromethane has a permanent dipole moment so there will be dipole dipole interactions as well as London dispersion forces, caused by instantaneous dipole interactions.
Ld
Dispersion
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.
Dichlorine monoxide
Dichlorine monoxide is a covalent compound.
The chemical formula of dichlorine monoxide is Cl2O - 2 is a subscript.
A colorless,odorless toxic flammable gas formed incomplete combustion of carbon
Chlorine forms multiple oxides. In order of increasing oxidation state, A few are are: dichlorine monoxide: Cl2O chlorine dioxide: ClO2 dichlorine heptoxide: Cl2O7
No, covalency does not have its own intermolecular force
It forms calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and dichlorine monoxide (Cl2O).
Cl2 is chlorine gas. There are two chlorine atoms covalently bonded to each other in a simple molecular structure. The chemical symbol for chlorine, on the other hand, is Cl and the formula for the chloride ion is Cl-.
It's dichlorine monoxide. Both elements are nonmetals, so you use prefixes. "Di" is 2, and "mono" is 1.
London Force
The substance Cl2O is known as dichlorine monoxide. This name is derived from the formula; chlorine has the prefix "di" because there are two chlorine elements and oxide has the prefix "mono" because there is one oxygen atom.
Solid state matter has maximum intermolecular force.