Misc.
Resonance / Polarity
Intermolecular Forces
E&M Geometry
Past Content
100

Molecule 1 has a higher boiling point than Molecule 2 which means that these are greater in Molecule 1

Intermolecular forces

100

True or False: Every molecule has a resonance structure

False

100

These are the intermolecular forces

London-dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding

100

This is the electron geometry of a CH4 Molecule

Tetrahedral

100

This atom has the symbol Ne

Neon

200

This is the term for the condensed version of a molecular formula

Empirical formula

200

The molecule Ozone (O3) has this many resonance structures

Two
200

These are the intermolecular forces found in water

London-dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding

200

This is the molecular geometry of H2O

Bent

200

Atomic radius increases this direction on the periodic table

Down and left

300

These are the two most common atoms to break the octet rule

Sulfur and Phosphorus

300

The molecule CF4 is this type of molecule

Non-polar

300

Ammonia would better dissolve in this rather than a grease

Water

300

This is the electron geometry of XeF2

Trigonal bipyramidal

300

The ability of an atom to pull electrons to itself

Electro negativity

400

This is the mixing of atomic orbitals in a molecule

Hybridization

400

The molecule CH3(CH2)4OH is this type of molecule

Polar

400

This is considered a "universal solvent" due to its strong ability to pull apart most molecules

Water

400

This is the molecular geometry of Ammonia

Trigonal pyramidal

400

This polyatomic ion has the formula CO32-

Carbonate

500

You're all going to do this on the exam

Succeed, pass, great, etc.

500

This is the definition of resonance in regards to chemistry

When two or more Lewis structures with atoms in the same position are averaged to
give the true structure

500

This kind of molecule would dissolve better in hexane (C6H14) than in water

Non-polar molecule

500

This is the molecular geometry of sulfur tetrafluoride

Seesaw

500

This is the chemical formula of the polyatomic ion acetone

(CH3)2CO or C3H6O

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