Chemistry, asked by rita9080, 1 year ago

Why is it not proper to regard the gaseous state of ammonia as vapour

Answers

Answered by Candice22
4
The word "vapor" refers to the gaseous form of a substance that is either a liquid or a solid at "normal" temperatures. Ammonia exists as a gas at normal temperature, so it is referred to as "gas", not as "vapor".

That is because, ammonia remains in gaseous state at room temperature, so it's called a gas.
We call something a vapour when that element remains a solid or a liquid at room temperature but vaporizes at a temp. higher than the room temp. but a gas is in gaseous state even at room temp.

Hope this helps!
Answered by Suhas2340
1

Answer:

Explanation: The word "vapor" refers to the gaseous form of a substance that is either a liquid or a solid at "normal" temperatures. Ammonia exists as a gas at normal temperature, so it is referred to as "gas", not as "vapor".

That is because, ammonia remains in gaseous state at room temperature, so it's called a gas.

We call something a vapour when that element remains a solid or a liquid at room temperature but vaporizes at a temp. higher than the room temp. but a gas is in gaseous state even at room temp.

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