Chemistry, asked by veenadsouza781, 1 year ago

why is melting point less for aliphatic compounds than aromatic

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0
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✌️Because it can be melt in just it's required little temperature ( heat ) so that it's melting point is less.

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Answered by aryan15912
0

Answer:

Benzene is the archetypical aromatic compound. It is planar, bond angles=120º, all carbon atoms in the ring are sp2 hybridized, and the pi-orbitals are occupied by 6 electrons. The aromatic heterocycle pyridine is similar to benzene, and is often used as a weak base for scavenging protons. Furan and pyrrole have heterocyclic five-membered rings, in which the heteroatom has at least one pair of non-bonding valence shell electrons. By hybridizing this heteroatom to a sp2 state, a p-orbital occupied by a pair of electrons and oriented parallel to the carbon p-orbitals is created. The resulting planar

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