Water, believe it or not.
Water (H2O) is in a liquid state at room temperature (around 20-25°C).
The "l" subscript on H2O signifies that water is in its liquid state at room temperature and pressure.
The density of H2O is 0.9982g/mL at 20°C. Usually a value of 1 is used at room temperature.
NH3 (ammonia) is most likely to be a gas at room temperature, while N2 (nitrogen) and H2O (water) are most likely to be liquids. Na2S (sodium sulfide) and HF (hydrogen fluoride) are solid at room temperature.
H2O is water, it can be a liquid, a gas or a solid (ice).
Water (H2O) is in a liquid state at room temperature (around 20-25°C).
The "l" subscript on H2O signifies that water is in its liquid state at room temperature and pressure.
Pure water is H2O, liquid at room temperature.
The density of H2O is 0.9982g/mL at 20°C. Usually a value of 1 is used at room temperature.
NH3 (ammonia) is most likely to be a gas at room temperature, while N2 (nitrogen) and H2O (water) are most likely to be liquids. Na2S (sodium sulfide) and HF (hydrogen fluoride) are solid at room temperature.
Hydrogen bonding is stronger in water than in ammonia.
Hydrogen is not inert it reacts explosively with Oxygen to create water H2O
At room temperature, all samples of liquid H2O must have the same boiling point, which is 100 degrees Celsius or 212 degrees Fahrenheit at standard atmospheric pressure.
Sodium chloride is an ionic salt, solid. Water is an oxide, liquid at room temperature.
H2O is water, it can be a liquid, a gas or a solid (ice).
Yes. The reaction would be Ca + H2O --> Ca(OH)2 + H2. Hope that helped.
they have different melting points and specific heat