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Hydrogen bonding, which is the strongest of the intermolecular forces.
Stearic acid since it is nonpolar and H2O is polar.
when salt is added to ice, salt being an impurity, reduces the inter molecular space between ice molecules. As we know that ice, in order to melt, contracts, i.e reduces the inter molecular space between its molecules. salt increases this activity and so ice melts at a lower temperature than it usually does. i.e salt decreases the melting point of ice.
Intermolecular forces are weak in gases.
When gas is released in a container the gas molecules spread all over the container and show that they have least force of attraction.
Hydrogen bonding, which is the strongest of the intermolecular forces.
Stearic acid since it is nonpolar and H2O is polar.
Van der Waals forces APEX
The cause is just this weak intermolecular force, ease to be broken.
when salt is added to ice, salt being an impurity, reduces the inter molecular space between ice molecules. As we know that ice, in order to melt, contracts, i.e reduces the inter molecular space between its molecules. salt increases this activity and so ice melts at a lower temperature than it usually does. i.e salt decreases the melting point of ice.
Intermolecular forces are weak in gases.
Inter molecular force
Dispersion forces would have the least effect on the boiling point of a liquid. They are the weakest intermolecular forces.
They have london forces between them. It is the weakest type of inter molecular force.
The density of material depends upon the inter molecular force of attraction between the molecules... some solid molecules have more inter molecular force hence they are denser than other solids...
No. They are inter molecular forces acting between two different molecules.
There are both London Dispersion forces and Dipole-Dipole forces within Acetone.