Chemistry, asked by rupalisharma78572, 1 year ago

arrange the oxo acids of chlorine in increasing order of their acid strength. or structure of XeF4

Answers

Answered by irfanshaik25
1
structure of XeF4 ☝️☝️☝️
Attachments:

rupalisharma78572: or volume available
rupalisharma78572: vo a or b points h question k
irfanshaik25: i think option 'a' is correct.
rupalisharma78572: you are not understanding the question
rupalisharma78572: aaccount for the following properties of gases on the basis of kinetic molecular theory of gases. ans plzz
irfanshaik25: ohh...ok.
irfanshaik25: There is no space between the individual particles, so they cannot pack together. The kinetic-molecular theory explains why gases are more compressible than either liquids or solids. Gases are compressible because most of the volume of a gas is composed of the large amounts of empty space between the gas particles.
irfanshaik25: At room temperature and standard pressure, the average distance between gas molecules is about ten times the diameter of the molecules themselves. When a gas is compressed, as when the scuba tank is being filled, the gas particles are forced closer together.
rupalisharma78572: write the hybridisation and number of unpaired electrons is the complex [ NiCl4]², [Atomic number of Ni=28]
rupalisharma78572: The human eye is an organ which reacts to lightand pressure. As a sense organ, the mammalian eye allows vision. Human eyes help to provide a three dimensional, moving image, normally coloured in daylight. Rod and cone cells in the retina allow conscious light perception and vision including color differentiation and the perception of depth. The human eye can differentiate between about 10 million colors[1] and is possibly capable of detecting a single photon.[2]
Answered by GulabLachman
0

There are four types of oxoacids of chlorine as follows

  1. Hypochlorous acid - HOCl - 7.5
  2. Chlorous acid - HClO₂ - 1.9
  3. Chloric acid- HClO₃ - -2
  4. Perchloric acid- HClO₄ - -10

The increasing order of acid strength-

HOCl < HClO₂ < HClO₃ < HClO₄

Similar questions