H2S is polar compound.There ard dipole-dipole bonds.
Dipole-dipole interactions and dispersion forces. No hydrogen bonding exists in H2S.
intermolecular hydrogen bonding that is prsnt in H2O while absnt in H2S....:)
Ion-ion forces
Look at intermolecular forces and judge from there
Hydrogen sulphide. H2S.
Dipole-dipole interactions and dispersion forces. No hydrogen bonding exists in H2S.
intermolecular hydrogen bonding that is prsnt in H2O while absnt in H2S....:)
Ion-ion forces
Look at intermolecular forces and judge from there
Because it has weaker intermolecular bonds.It has dipole dipole bonds while water has H bonds.
Hydrogen sulphide. H2S.
Hydrogen Sulfide. It is present as a gas at room temperature, but is an acid.
Single Displacement
possible depends on its concentration and vacuum degasifier conditions
H2S 63.1 g H2S * 1 mol H2S / 34.076 g H2S = 1.85 mol H2S
The sulfate radical has covalent bonding. Since sulfur and oxygen are both nonmetals, they have to form a covalent bond. Only the combination of a metal and a nonmetal would form an ionic bond.
The formula for dihydrogen monosulfide is H2S.