Ammonia has a nitrogen with a lone pair and three hydrogens, so shouldn't there be extensive hydrogen bonding between molecules? I mean one hydrogen would attach to a nitrogen from ammonia and the next one would attach to another nitrogen from ammonia, etc
No. Ammonia is a gas at room temperature..
No, at room temperature ammonia is a gas.
Ammonia is a gas at room temperature.
Ammonia is the scientific term for ammonia.Household ammonia is actually a solution of ammonia (which is a gas at room temperature and ordinary pressures) in water.
It can be any of the three phases. Which phase it is depends on what temperature it is at. This is true for almost every compound known to man. At room temperature, ammonia, NH3, is a gas. It becomes a liquid if cooled below -28 degrees F, and will freeze into a solid once below -108 degrees F. Household ammonia is liquid at room temperature; it is a solution of ammonia in water.
No. Ammonia is a gas at room temperature..
Ammonia is a gas at room temperature.
At room temperature ammonia (NH3) is a gas.
No, at room temperature ammonia is a gas.
Ammonia is a gas at room temperature.
Hydrogen bonding is stronger in water than in ammonia.
Hydrogen bonding is stronger in water than in ammonia.
IN pure form at room temperature ammonia is a gas. However, household ammonia is sold in the form of an aqueous solution.
Ammonia is the scientific term for ammonia.Household ammonia is actually a solution of ammonia (which is a gas at room temperature and ordinary pressures) in water.
Ammonia can be mixed with KNO3 at room temperature.
It can be any of the three phases. Which phase it is depends on what temperature it is at. This is true for almost every compound known to man. At room temperature, ammonia, NH3, is a gas. It becomes a liquid if cooled below -28 degrees F, and will freeze into a solid once below -108 degrees F. Household ammonia is liquid at room temperature; it is a solution of ammonia in water.
At STP (standard temperature and pressure) it is a gas. It can be made to be a liquid or gas by adjusting the temperature and pressure around it, but at room temperature and one atmosphere of pressure (sea level) it is a gas.