chloroform is a polar compound. There are C,H and Cl as elements.
Chloroform is known as trichloromethane. It has a formula of CHCl4. So, the elements are Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine.
Chloroform is CHCl3 (with a lowercase L), not CHCI3. CHCl3 is a compound. Made up of elements. There for C (carbon) H (hydrogen) and Cl (chlorine) are found on the periodic table of elements but not the whole compound.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine. The Chloroform molecule is CHCl3 . Its modern IUPAC name is 'Trichloromethane'.
Because you're living in some alternate universe where the rules of physics are different; chloroform is polar. Carbon tetrachloride is non-polar because of its symmetry (there's no net polarity to the molecule because all the individual polar bonds cancel out) but this is not true for chloroform.
Chloroform is CHCl3 (with a lowercase L), not CHCI3. CHCl3 is a compound. Made up of 3 elements Carbon, Hydrogen, and Chlorine.
Chloroform is known as trichloromethane. It has a formula of CHCl4. So, the elements are Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine.
No it does not have. Atomic number i for elements.
23 symmetry elements are there in cubic system
Chloroform is CHCl3 (with a lowercase L), not CHCI3. CHCl3 is a compound. Made up of elements. There for C (carbon) H (hydrogen) and Cl (chlorine) are found on the periodic table of elements but not the whole compound.
There are 3 elements in chloroform. One Carbon, One hydrogen and three chlorine atoms
Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine. The Chloroform molecule is CHCl3 . Its modern IUPAC name is 'Trichloromethane'.
Because you're living in some alternate universe where the rules of physics are different; chloroform is polar. Carbon tetrachloride is non-polar because of its symmetry (there's no net polarity to the molecule because all the individual polar bonds cancel out) but this is not true for chloroform.
There are 3 elements in chloroform. One Carbon, One hydrogen and three chlorine atoms
Chloroform is CHCl3 (with a lowercase L), not CHCI3. CHCl3 is a compound. Made up of 3 elements Carbon, Hydrogen, and Chlorine.
Jay Hambidge has written: 'Dynamic symmetry in composition' 'The elements of dynamic symmetry' 'The Partheon and other Greek temples'
it is soluble in chloroform. Chloroform is nonpolar.
No, chloroform is covalent.