
- Part A Explain Why Ncl Is A Liquid At Room Temperature While Nh3 Is A Gas Nci Has Greater Dipole Moment Than Nh3 And T 1 (409.45 KiB) Viewed 30 times

- Part A Explain Why Ncl Is A Liquid At Room Temperature While Nh3 Is A Gas Nci Has Greater Dipole Moment Than Nh3 And T 2 (281.08 KiB) Viewed 30 times

- Part A Explain Why Ncl Is A Liquid At Room Temperature While Nh3 Is A Gas Nci Has Greater Dipole Moment Than Nh3 And T 3 (351.37 KiB) Viewed 30 times
Part A Explain why NCL is a liquid at room temperature while NH3 is a gas. NCI, has greater dipole moment than NH3 and thus the dipole-dipole forces in NC1, are stronger O The dispersion forces are greater in NC13 than in NH3. O Hydrogen bonding is present in NC1, but not in NH₂. O NC1, partly dissociates to form ions and NH, does not. Therefore, ion-dipole interactions are present in NCI, but not in NH3,
What kinds of intermolecular forces are present in a mixture of methane and propane (CH3CH₂CH3)? dispersion and dipole-dipole Ⓒdispersion, dipole-dipole, and hydrogen bonding Ⓒdispersion dipole-dipole, ion-dipole, and hydrogen bonding
Consider the following compounds. Part A H₂C O=0 CH₂ H3C CH₂ CH₂ Molar masses of acetone, butane, 1-propanol = CH3 H₂C LIVE ΑΣΦ CH₂ Calculate the molar mass of each compound. Express your answers in grams per mole to four significant figures separated by commas. f CH₂ OH O 1 ? g/mol