#1
31st May 2016, 09:37 AM
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HCL Type of Solid
Hi I would like to have information about the Hydrochloric acid and why it cannot be termed as a solid?
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#2
31st May 2016, 09:58 AM
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Re: HCL Type of Solid
Hydrochloric acid is a reasonable, dismal, exceptionally sharp arrangement of hydrogen chloride (HCl) in water. It is an exceptionally destructive, solid mineral corrosive with numerous mechanical employments. Hydrochloric corrosive is discovered normally in gastric corrosive. When it responds with a natural base it shapes a hydrochloride salt. For basic clarification, as a matter of first importance ionic bond just framed amongst metal and non-metal. Be that as it may, both Cl and H are non-metal . So really HCl shapes polar covalent bond. Cl is substantial and has high electronegativity contrasted with H. In this manner the electron cloud tends to move towards Cl. Thats why it is polar. HCl is a covalent compound. Since, both the iotas share the electrons. As a result of the size contrast of molecules, Hydrogen can't act like a cation, until it disassociates. Additionally, HCl has intemolecular London scattering strengths, which emerges to the EN (electronegativity) distinction amongst Chlorine and Hydrogen particle. In straightforward words, the compound with High positive charge, little cation and huge anion is more covalent in nature. |
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