Hydrogen chloride is a covalant compound but it ionizes in solution. why ?
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1
Answer:
when HCl dissolves in water, its components dissociate into H+ ions and Cl- ions when the covalent bond is broken between them. This helps make water an excellent solvent for polar compounds like HCl due to the attraction of opposite charges.
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Answered by
1
Answer:
Many bonds can be covalent in one situation and ionic in another. Hydrogen chloride, HCl, is a gas in which the hydrogen and chlorine are covalently bound, but if HCl is bubbled into the water, it ionizes completely to give the H
+
and Cl
−
of a hydrochloric acid solution.
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