A) Energy is released as a bond is broken. B) Energy is absorbed as a bond is broken. C) Energy is absorbed as a bond is formed. D) Energy is released as a bond is formed
A) A bond is broken and energy is released. B) A bond is formed and energy is absorbed. C) A bond is broken and energy is absorbed. D) A bond is formed and energy is released.
A) hydrogen gas B) sulfur dioxide C) helium D) water
A) nitrogen B) fluorine C) carbon D) oxygen E) hydrogen
A) H2Te B) H2Se C) H2S D) H2O
A) Dispersion and dipole-dipole B) dipole-dipole and hydrogen bonding C) Dispersion and hydrogen bonding D) Dispersion, dipole-dipole, and hydrogen bonding
A) NH3 B) H2S C) CH4 D) HCl
A) the electronegativity of chlorine is greater than that of hydrogen B) The number of valence electrons in a chlorine atom is greater than that in a hydrogen atom. C) The atomic mass of chlorine is greater than that of hydrogen D) The diameter of a chlorine atom is greater than that of a hydrogen atom.
A) hydrogen bonding B) covalent bonding C) ionic bonding D) dispersion forces
A) Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe B) Kr, Xe, Ar, Ne C) Ar, Kr, Ne, Xe D) Xe, Kr, Ar, Ne
A) exothermic because temperature of H2O increases B) endothermic because H2O absorbs heat energy C) exothermic because heat energy is released by H2O D) endothermic because temperature of H2O decreases
A) triple bond B) double bond C) single bond
A) H2O B) HF C) NH3 D) N2
A) F2 B) CH3OH C) NO D) C2H4
A) dipole-dipole attractions B) ionic bonds C) hydrogen bonds D) dispersion forces |