It stands for ammonia.It ia s basic compound
NH3 is the chemical formula for ammonia.
NH3 is classified as a base in chemistry because it can accept a proton (H) from an acid to form the ammonium ion (NH4), making it capable of neutralizing acids.
I think this belongs in Chemistry NH3 is Ammonia and NH4 would be an ammonia ION which is called Ammonium
Ammonia is called Ammonia only in chemistry. While writing reactions, we use its symbol NH(3).
Oh, dude, NH3 is actually not an ionic compound, it's ammonia. See, NH3 is a covalent compound because it's made up of nonmetals bonding together. So, it's like the cool kid in chemistry that doesn't follow the rules of ionic bonding.
Yes - it is a "Lewis salt" formed from a Lewis acid and a Lewis base. Most chemists would not call it a salt which is a term they would reserve for the product of the neutralisation of an H+ acid. They would call this an adduct or a complex.
Molecules of ammonia? Will assume so. 4.2 X 1025 molecules NH3 (1 mole NH3/6.022 X 1023)(17.034 grams/1 mole NH3) = 1188 grams of ammonia ===================( could call it 1200 grams NH3 for significant figure correctness )
The pair of molecules with the strongest dipole-dipole interactions would be NH3-NH3 because ammonia (NH3) is a polar molecule with a significant dipole moment, leading to stronger attractions compared to the other options listed.
I think it would be Azane .
Ammonia is pure substance. It is a molecule with formula NH(3).
The molar mass of NH3 is 17.03 g/mol. To find the mass of 3 moles of NH3, you would multiply the molar mass by 3. Therefore, the mass of 3 moles of ammonia would be 51.09 grams.
To find the mass of NH3 produced, first calculate the number of moles of NH3 using the given mass and the molar mass of NH3. Then, use the relationship between moles and mass (mass = moles x molar mass) to find the mass of NH3.