Monday, January 18, 2010

Liquid Force Substance Why Is Water A Liquid?

Why is water a liquid? - liquid force substance

Is it true that the intermolecular forces in a substance that determines whether the substance is a solid, liquid or gas? If so, how these substances with London forces (intermolecular forces may be weak) at room temperature and water hydrogen bonds down (this is the strongest intermolecular) is a liquid?

4 comments:

reb1240 said...

You need the molecular weight to be considered part of this debate. Molecules with a higher molecular weight IMF enough to contain a liquid or solid, even if the union is too low. Moledular Based on the mass should be only 18 years, water is a gas. Compare with the oxygen from nitrogen = 28 = 32 = 44 and CO2. Water is a liquid because of the hydrogen bonds, even though its mass is limited

banjoman said...

Liquid water is not provided. Sometimes it freezes into solid ice and flame. Eventually, gas and will evaporate as vapor or steam. What happens is that in our daily life, temperature and pressure so that water is a liquid.

Jamie lyn spears said...

why water is a liquid
becaue it is wet and she can get to drink it, so that you learn more and Thea's invited to go to school

anthony c said...

by the type of link
H2O years covalent covalent compounds are usually found in liquid or gaseous

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