The water stays on top of the oil
The first answer choice is correct: SF6 is a compound: it is a substance composed of more than one atom from different elements (sulfur and fluorine).
The second answer choice is incorrect: while SF6 is indeed a compound that contains seven atoms, those atoms are not identical since one is a sulfur atom and six are fluoride atoms.
The third answer choice is incorrect: SF6 is not an element because it can be separated chemically into simpler substances that are elements. All the atoms comprising an element must have the same number of protons (the same atomic number); sulfur and fluorine have different atomic numbers. There is no single nucleus in SF6; the S and six F atoms each has their own nucleus.
The fourth answer choice is incorrect; SF6 contains no carbon atom, and so wouldn’t meet a central criterion for an organic compound. Moreover, the formula SF6 indicates that the sulfur atom is not bonded to any other atom apart from fluorine atoms, and there are no bonding electrons left on the S. There is no plausible reason to think that a molecule with such weak intermolecular attractions as SF6 would form long chains of S atoms. Indeed, in standard conditions, SF6 is a gas.
Pfsst
bombal
chow
ddoggone
ernst
floxxit
goldy
nuutye
apstrom
logon
byyou
zapper
yazzer
highho
magnificon
oz
fratt
jeptum
quackzil
doadeer
rhaap
terriblum
sississ
urrp
vulcania
wobble
xtalt
pie
anatom
eldorado (I think these are the answers)
Answer:
D
Explanation:
My logic: Electricity produces heat, chemical reactions produce heat. And so on.
Answer:
Explanation:
When carbon dioxide dissolves and reacts with water, the water and the gaseous reacts to form a dilute mixture solution of (carbonic acid ).
The reaction is
This is a forward reaction. And the symbol shows that the reaction can be reversible. It means that the reaction can be carried in forward direction as well as in the backward direction.
The reaction attains chemical equilibrium until the reactants and the products no longer changes with time.
The carbonic acid can also dissociates into carbon dioxide and water in the backward direction.