Physics, asked by apadmakumari50, 23 hours ago

Why ammonium chloride can sublime but sodium chloride

can’t?

Give reasons
Please fast it's urgent​

Answers

Answered by jayahariramya
1

Answer:

Sodium Chloride is an ionic solid and has high melting and boiling points. So it can't change in vapour phase simply at gas pressure hence it cannot sublime. Ammonium chloride, solid and iodine undergo sublimation which on heating without coming within the liquid state directly converts during a gaseous state.

Answered by annabethgranger7
1

Answer:

ammonium chloride is a sublimable substance where as sodium chloride is not

Explanation:

sublimable solids have very low force of attraction.

on heating a sublimable solid, the interparticle attraction is overcome and it directly changes into vapor.

hope it helped.

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