Chemistry, asked by singhvagisha6, 8 months ago

atomicity of ammonium sulphate step by step

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Answers

Answered by anilranjani4
2

Explanation:

The atomicity of a molecule is the number of atoms that make up the molecule. A molecule of water, H2O, has an atomicity of 3. A molecule of sucrose, C12H22O11, has an atomicity of 45.

Ammonium sulfate, (NH4)2SO4, is problematic because it does not exist as discrete molecules. It can be envisioned a network solid consisting of NH4^+ and SO4^2- particles alternating throughout the entire sample.

If we extend atomicity to the formula units of substances that don’t exist as discrete molecules, then it would be 15.

Answered by dibyasundarmajumder
4

Answer:

get methe atomicity of ammonium sulphate is very tough and problematic because it does not exist as a discrete molecules so it cannot be told what is the atomicity of ammonium sulphate

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