"Double ammonia" is not a specific term in chemistry. It may refer to a solution containing a higher concentration of ammonia than usual, or it could be a misunderstanding or misuse of terminology. ammonia solution may vary in strength and concentration.
no there is not. There are not any double bonds.
Ammonia is a covalant compound. It has a lone pair on the nitrogen atom.
No. Ammonia contains three single covalent bonds.
When you mix alum and ammonia, a chemical reaction occurs that forms a white precipitate called aluminum hydroxide. This reaction is known as a double displacement reaction, where the ions from the alum and ammonia switch partners to form the new compound.
99.95%(pure ammonia) or better is Refridgeration grade ammonia.
no there is not. There are not any double bonds.
Single.
No. NH3, ammonia, only contains single covalent bonds. Hydrogen cannot form double bonds.
Ammonia is a covalant compound. It has a lone pair on the nitrogen atom.
No. Ammonia contains three single covalent bonds.
When you mix alum and ammonia, a chemical reaction occurs that forms a white precipitate called aluminum hydroxide. This reaction is known as a double displacement reaction, where the ions from the alum and ammonia switch partners to form the new compound.
99.95%(pure ammonia) or better is Refridgeration grade ammonia.
Ammonia is a gas - it can't be "straight".
Ammonia is ammonia and ammonia is toxic. Non-toxic ammonia does not exist. Ammonia can be diluted in water or held in a sealed container, but it's still toxic.
When ammonia (NH3) reacts with hydrochloric acid (HCl), it forms ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) through a double displacement reaction. The ammonia acts as a base, accepting a proton (H+) from the hydrochloric acid to form ammonium ions (NH4+), while chloride ions (Cl-) are released.
the common name of ammonia is more or less ammonia since it not it's chemical name and ammonia is also a baking soda
Ammonia is a noun.