Because their relationship was so strong they can do anything <3
Attractions between water molecules, such as hydrogen bonding, are stronger than the dispersion forces between carbon dioxide molecules. This results in water requiring more energy to break these intermolecular attractions and reach its boiling point than carbon dioxide.
CO2 is a compound made of non-metals. Compounds made of non-metals are called covalent molecular substances. Covalent molecular substances have a low melting and boiling point because there are weak intermolecular forces between the molecules of the compound and needs only a little thermal energy to separate the particles. But its only the IM forces that are broken not the covalent bonds. There you go, i hope that helped
Carbon dioxide exists as a gas at stp, and water exists as a liquid. Therefore, CO2 has already passed the boiling point, so water has the higher boiling point.
No, carbon dioxide has a much lower boiling point than water. The boiling point is the temperature at which a substance changes phases from a solid to a liquid. Carbon dioxide is a gas at room temperature, while water is found primarily in liquid form at room temperature. Therefore, at 78 degrees F, carbon dioxide is above its boiling point while water is below its boiling point.
Dioxide is typically covalent, meaning it forms through the sharing of electrons between atoms. Ionic compounds involve the transfer of electrons, which is not the case for dioxide molecules.
Attractions between water molecules, such as hydrogen bonding, are stronger than the dispersion forces between carbon dioxide molecules. This results in water requiring more energy to break these intermolecular attractions and reach its boiling point than carbon dioxide.
You Ultimately would not expect them to have similar melting and boiling points.This is because Carbon Dioxide is a gas, it might have strong covalent bonds between their atoms but between their molecules they have weak intermolecular forces, therefore these forces are easily overcome during heating in lower temperaturesHowever when you look at Silicon Dioxide, it has a macromolecular structure. In other words the whole solid is actually just one molecule which its atoms are each covalently bonded to each other. Therefore since it has strong covalent bonds between them you would expect them to have extremely high melting and boiling points.Diamond is a macromolecular structure and it has a melting point of 3006 degrees centigrade. You could expect Silicon Dioxide's melting point (and boiling point) to be similarly high.
2 molecules are produced
CO2 is a compound made of non-metals. Compounds made of non-metals are called covalent molecular substances. Covalent molecular substances have a low melting and boiling point because there are weak intermolecular forces between the molecules of the compound and needs only a little thermal energy to separate the particles. But its only the IM forces that are broken not the covalent bonds. There you go, i hope that helped
Sulfur dioxide has a low boiling point because it is a small molecule with weak intermolecular forces. The forces holding sulfur dioxide molecules together are relatively weak, requiring less energy to break and therefore resulting in a lower boiling point compared to compounds with stronger intermolecular forces.
Explosion
H2O (water) has a higher melting point and boiling point than CO2 because of the hydrogen bonds that exist between the water molecules. The hydrogen bonds are strong intermolecular forces (though they are classified as a weak bond), and help to hold separate water molecules together. Thus, the boiling point of water is higher than carbon dioxide, though they are similar in composition and mass.
Carbon dioxide exists as a gas at stp, and water exists as a liquid. Therefore, CO2 has already passed the boiling point, so water has the higher boiling point.
Carbon dioxide is unstable in water. It forms a equilibrium changing between aqueous and gaseous form. This makes it impossible to tell how many molecules are in water.
The size of carbon dioxide molecules does not directly impact the environment. Instead, it is the quantity of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere that contributes to environmental issues such as climate change and global warming.
No, carbon dioxide has a much lower boiling point than water. The boiling point is the temperature at which a substance changes phases from a solid to a liquid. Carbon dioxide is a gas at room temperature, while water is found primarily in liquid form at room temperature. Therefore, at 78 degrees F, carbon dioxide is above its boiling point while water is below its boiling point.
They aren't the same. The boiling point of carbon dioxide is -57 oC. (Wikipedia)