Because it is a gas, it reacts with nearly everything (difficult to design and prepare a container for it), it is extremely corrosive and extremely poisonous.
It is not ever used in school chemistry laboratories (the word "normally" in the question is not quite right!)
No it has 9, I only know this from studying chemistry at school and from textbooks.
I believe but could be wrong, that LiCN is Lithium Cyanide.Source - Im a high school chemistry student
· Francium Sulfide (Fr2S) · Francium Phosphide (Fr3P) · Francium Bromide (FrBr) · Francium Sulfite (Fr2SO3) · Francium Hydrogen Oxalate (FrHC2­O4)
melting point for alcohols which are solids at room temperature? or freezing points of alcohols? Melting point for any solid is listed in melting point tables. See high school or college organic chemistry books or books with physical properties of materials (eg chem engineering books. Any reference librarian will point to the right book.
benfiled side school
No it has 9, I only know this from studying chemistry at school and from textbooks.
The motto of Technological University of Pereira School of Chemistry is 'School of Chemistry'.
Chemistry is a learning discipline and is learned at school.
for school teacher Rs 28000 & for collage chemistry teacher 90000
Chemistry.
because this is the right place to do an experiment
Only in special controlled laboratories.
Technological University of Pereira School of Chemistry was created in 1968.
Chemistry
College chemistry is harder.
W. F. Archenhold has written: 'School science laboratories' -- subject(s): Handbooks, manuals, Physical laboratories
Chemistry in school is important because it gets children interested in careers that deal with chemistry. If children are not exposed to chemistry there would not be doctors, scientists, or people to cure diseases.