Option D
When you squeeze an air-filled balloon, what happens inside: There are more collisions of air molecules against the wall of the balloon.
<u>Explanation:</u>
If you compress off the balloon, one seemingly sense the air forcing up on the wall of the balloon with indeed more imposing power. This rise in force is due to a drop in quantity. By squeezing the balloon, you lessen the area the gas bits can hold.
As the particles are driven a little closer collectively, they oppose more, so the force from the moving gas bits rises. Boyle’s Law pronounces that the quantity of a determined quantity of gas limits as its load rises. If the quantity rises, its load reduces.
Answer:
covalent bond
Explanation:
a covalent bond happens between two nonmetals
a ionic bond happens between a metal and a non metal
CO2 is a bond between carbon and oxygen
carbon and oxygen are both non metals therefore CO2 is a covalent bond
Answer:
mass CaI2 = 23.424 Kg
Explanation:
From the periodic table we obtain for CaI2:
⇒ molecular mass CaI2: 40.078 + ((2)(126.90)) = 293.878 g/mol
∴ mol CaI2 = (4.80 E25 units )×(mol/6.022 E23 units) = 79.708 mol CaI2
⇒ mass CaI2 = (79.708 mol CaI2)×(293.878 g/mol) = 23424.43 g
⇒ mass CaI2 = 23.424 Kg
Calcium forms an ion with a positive 2 charge and chlorine forms an ion with a negative one charg, so the formula is <span>CaC<span>l2</span></span>
Group 1 metals and group 2 metals form positive ions by losing 1 and 2 electrons respectively. Non-metals in group 17 gain 1, group 16 gain 2 and group 15 gain 3. Elements which lose electrons form positive ions while elements that gain electrons form negative ions.
To write a formula, you must balance charges so the overall charge is zero. A simple way to do this is to swap the # of the ion's charge and make it the subscript of the other ion. However, leave off the number 1 and reduce to lowest whole number ratio.