Hydrogen chloride is polar becasue it has unequally shared electrons.
Answer:
#1 You get valid data for one.
#2 Not measuring accurately can have some bad consequences.
#3 If you mix the wrong amount of chemicals you can end up getting yourself or worse other people hurt.
#4 When making food you need to measure the amount of sugar or salt you put into the dish or else your face will be this
I think it’s (D) pressure
Answer:
.
Explanation:
Lithium is in the first column of the periodic table, so it will have 1 valence electron.
Bromine is in the seventh column of the periodic table, so it will have seven valence electrons.
They must combine in a way to reach 8.
When combining elements to form compounds, the "crisscross method" is used. Above Li would be a charge of +1, and above Br would be a charge of -1.
Cross the 1 from the top of Li to the bottom of Br, and so there is 1 Br.
Cross the 1 from the top of Br to the bottom of Li, and so there is 1 Li.
It is not written BrLi because chemists decided to order them the other way. Technically speaking, it isn't wrong, but the positive charge is normally put on the left and the negative charge is normally put on the right.
Explanation:
In a Brønsted-Lowry acid-base reaction, a conjugate acid is the species formed after the base accepts a proton. By contrast, a conjugate base is the species formed after an acid donates its proton.
Proton = H⁺
This means for the molecules that requires us to look for their conjugate bases, we simply remove a proton to it.
a. What are the conjugate bases of the molecules:
i C6H5OH : C6H5O⁻
ii. CH3-SH : CH3-S⁻
iii. CH3-CH2-CO2H : CH3-CH2-COO⁻
The molecules that requires us to look for their conjugate acids, we simply add a proton to it.
b. What are the conjugate acids of the molecules:
i. CH3–(CH2)-CO2- : i. CH3–(CH2)-COOH
ii. CH3–(CH2)-NH2 : ii. CH3–(CH2)-NH3⁺
iii. Ring at right ?