0.26 nm
Urea or carbamide is an organic compound with the chemical formula (NH2)2CO. The molecule has two amine (-NH2) groups joined by a carbonyl (C=O) functional group.
The structure of urea determines its polarity. The C=O portion of the molecule is polar, as well as the two N-H bonds on the opposite end. Therefore urea is a polar molecule. Refer to the related links for an illustration.
This compound is polar covalent.
Can a water molecule size 54hz be stable for a period of time?
= 1.4
The radius of a glycerol molecule is about 4.35 angstroms.
Carbon dioxide
It is between 1 and 55 Angstroms.55 Angstroms equates to 5.5 nanometers.
Stretched out straight most of them would be somewhere between 10 and 20 Angstroms long and a couple of Angstroms wide. Unsaturation will put one or more bends in the molecule.
The lattice constant is 5,65 angstroms.
The number of atoms in urea will depend on the number of urea molecules present. In one MOLECULE of urea there are 8 atoms. There are 2 N atoms, 4 H atoms, 1 C atom and 1 O atom. The structural formula of urea is H2NC(O)NH2
Mosquitoes poo is measured in angstroms. The female poo is typically 30-40 angstroms in size, twice the size of their male counterpart who's poo is approximately 15-20 angstroms. The female ingests blood unlike the male and this may account for the difference in poo ratio. Hope this helps.
Ammonia, Urea, or Uric acid. Urea is the main component of nitrogenous waste found in the urine.
urea
There are 10 angstroms in one nanometer.
29200000000 angstroms
"Oil molecule" isn't well defined, nor is "diameter" in this case. Please be more specific about what compound you're talking about. Knowing how you want the "diameter" to be measured is also important.Petroleum ("oil" in the pump-it-out-of-the-ground-and-turn-it-into-gasoline sense) is mostly C5 and above alkanes (up to, say, C40 or so). These can be either long straight chains or branched chains. The diameter of the chain at a non-branching point is a couple of Angstroms; from end to end the chain might be up to 30 Angstroms or so. Oils in the food sense are mostly shortish-chain saturated carboxylic acid triglycerides, or slightly longer-chain unsaturated carboxylic acid triglycerides. Again, the diameter of any of the carboxylic acid chains will be about two Angstroms, and from end to end ... 30 Angstroms isn't a completely unreasonable guess. In both cases, the chains are unlikely to be stretched out straight, but rather will be folded back on itself in some complicated way. It's difficult to predict the "diameter" of the folded chain (which almost certainly will not be a sphere), and it will constantly be changing anyway.