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The strongest intermolecular forces that would exist between molecules of NO would be dipole-dipole attractions. There are no hydrogen bonds formed, and so dipole-dipole would be the strongest. There will also be dispersion forces, but these are weaker than dipoles.
a molecules are made of atoms
There are quite a few molecules that must form for life to exist. One of these life-supporting molecules is water.
Ozone exists as triatomic molecules. O3
almost positive they are Vander waals forces
The strongest intermolecular forces exist between polar molecules, because the polar molecules act as tiny dipoles.
attractive force present between ammonia ions repulsive force also exist but not at high rate
The strongest intermolecular forces that would exist between molecules of NO would be dipole-dipole attractions. There are no hydrogen bonds formed, and so dipole-dipole would be the strongest. There will also be dispersion forces, but these are weaker than dipoles.
The strongest intermolecular forces that would exist between molecules of NO would be dipole-dipole attractions. There are no hydrogen bonds formed, and so dipole-dipole would be the strongest. There will also be dispersion forces, but these are weaker than dipoles.
Yes they do.
Nitrogen is usually quite unreactive at both standard pressure and standard temperature. Nitrogen is relatively unreactive because nitrogen molecules are joined together by triple bonds, and these bonds are some of the strongest bonds that can exist between molecules.
There are no bonds between hexane molecules. There are intermolecular forces, called London Dispersion Forces which attract other hexane molecules.
Hydrogen bonds are the strongest intermolecular bond, as opposed to intramolecular bonds (ionic, covalent and metallic). They are therefore comparatively weak (these are what is broken when a substance becomes gaseous). Intermolecular bonds exist, as the name suggests, between molecules.
Ammonia is ammonia and ammonia is toxic. Non-toxic ammonia does not exist. Ammonia can be diluted in water or held in a sealed container, but it's still toxic.
The structure of water remains the same that is,H2O but bonding between water molecules vary in each state.bonding is strongest in ice and weakest in steam.This is the reason behind the fact that ice exist in a big bulk
There are a infinitely growing number of bond pairs between atoms.
Ammonia is a compound and so can exist as a pure substance. Household ammonia is not pure. It is a 3% ammonia solution. The other 97% is water. Pure ammonia is very dangerous.