Chemistry, asked by riyakanojiya16payz2c, 5 months ago

Hydrogen chloride is a covalant compound but it ionizes in solution. why ?
pls answer ​

Answers

Answered by kdhir
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.

hope it help.

Answered by sudhanshukumar91
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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