36
The chemical formula for ethylene glycol is C2H6O2.
(0.23)(1.04g/mL)(1000mL/L)(1 mol C2H6O2/62g C2H6O2) = 3.86 M
These are hydrogen bonds and dispersion forces.
False. as the number of ions in solution are different for both.
The active ingredient in most types of antifreeze is ethylene glycol, which contains 10 atoms in each molecules (2 carbon, 6 hydrogen, and 2 oxygen).
The chemical formula for ethylene glycol is C2H6O2, so in 6 molecules there would be 36 atoms of hydrogen
The chemical formula for ethylene glycol is C2H6O2.
C2h6o2
The classification for C2H6O2 is a molecular compound. This is the chemical formula for ethylene glycol which has non-dissociating bonds.
NOT: C9h17o3 but HO-CH2-CH2-OH, C2H6O2 Ethylene glycol is 1,2-ethanediol:
ethylene glycol and methanol
Molecular formula is C2H6O2 Maybe pH is 7. I measure the PH of ethylene glycol myself with az 8686 PH meter. The number that i saw was 8. I thinck its because of hydroxyl group(OH) in its Molecular formula(HOCH2CH2OH=C2H6O2).
(0.23)(1.04g/mL)(1000mL/L)(1 mol C2H6O2/62g C2H6O2) = 3.86 M
Ethylene glycol (IUPAC name: ethane-1,2-diol; Chemical formula C2H6O2) is an organic compound widely used as an automotive antifreeze and a precursor to polymers. In its pure form, it is an odorless, colorless, syrupy, sweet-tasting liquid. Ethylene glycol is toxic, and ingestion can result in death.
These are hydrogen bonds and dispersion forces.
In ethylene glycol, hydrogen bonding occurs between the hydrogen atoms of one molecule and the oxygen atoms of another molecule. This leads to the formation of a network of hydrogen bonds between adjacent molecules, resulting in a higher boiling point and viscosity compared to molecules without hydrogen bonding.
Ethylene glycol