View Full Version : Describe chemical compounds as CHARGED, POLAR or NONPOLAR
aero_zeppelin
Dec15-11, 07:39 PM
Ok, I thought the only two options in existence were Polar and Non-polar... and I'm being asked which ones are CHARGED? What does this mean?
Example: NH4+ (ammonium), NO3- (nitrate), N2, O2, H2O
Thanks!
aero_zeppelin
Dec15-11, 08:32 PM
... or maybe they mean if the molecule is polar or non-polar and to say if it has a charge (ionized)?
Frogeyedpeas
Dec17-11, 11:51 AM
That is what they mean...
All molecules are intrinsically polar or non-polar,
Now certain ionic compounds (which are EXTREMELY polar hence given the name ionic btw) can become charged as well, think about how they behave in the presence of a polar medium
The best example is as follows:
Mixing salt (NaCl) with water (H20) what happens?
Which is Polar/Nonpolar? Which is Ionic also? What happens then if they are mixed... Suppose that you were mixing just water inside a (high temperature) liquid salt medium... How would it behave
Realize that Ionic means that you are mixing metals and non-metals together. (To understand why imagine what happens if you mix a halogen with an alkali metal)
If you answer those questions above, it will make a lot of sense what the answer to this test is.
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