It is impossible to give a figure but it will be a lot lower as the polarity makes the molecules bond more tightly together. Remembering that H2S is a gas at room temperature (it is polar but not as much as water), I would imagine that water would be too but its boiling point would be even lower than H2S. However there are other factors affecting boiling point other than polarity.
H2S 63.1 g H2S * 1 mol H2S / 34.076 g H2S = 1.85 mol H2S
The formula for dihydrogen monosulfide is H2S.
H2S = hydrogen sulphide
No, H2S is hydrosulfuric acid. Sulfuric acid is H2SO4
The formula for dihydrogen sulfide, or just hydrogen sulfide, is H2S. A pair of hydrogen atoms are bonded to a sulfur atom to make up this toxic compound. A link can be found below for more information.
H2S is a polar compound.It is not ionic.
H2S is a bent shaped molecule.
Add an acid to Na2S.It will emit H2S.
H2S has two lone pairs.So it is bent.
Hydrosulfuric acid is H2S. H2S (aq) (H2SO4 is sulfuric acid). The acids with "hydro" at the start of their names are all derived from dissolved gases, e.g. hydrochloric acid is aqueous hydrogen chloride, hydrocyanic acid is aqueous hydrogen cyanide etc.
Why did water and H2S look alike?