What happen to intermolecular forces as molecular mass increases?
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hey friends
"As the number of carbon atoms and themolecular mass increases, the compounds are more likely to be liquids or solids because the intermolecular forces are stronger. You should see that the larger amolecule is the stronger theintermolecular forces are between itsmolecules."
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"As the number of carbon atoms and themolecular mass increases, the compounds are more likely to be liquids or solids because the intermolecular forces are stronger. You should see that the larger amolecule is the stronger theintermolecular forces are between itsmolecules."
Hope it is helpful
Thank you
:)-
Answered by
2
For a to exist, atoms have to stick together. This happens when two atoms share electrons. Instead of circling just one atom, the electron now circles around two. ... Then the atoms start to move, and when they move too much, the bond breaks.
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