Multi-Million/Billionaires Owning Farms
Society & Culture6 mins ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Lord Molly
Argon is indeed a monatomic gas, as are the other noble gases. Molecules are made up of two or more atoms, chemically bonded together. So, no, an argon atom is not a molecule. The atoms in a molecule need not be the same, but often are, as Newtron correctly stated (in a different manner) in his/her initial post.
As for propane, this is a hydrocarbon with the chemical formula C3H8 and exists as discrete molecules. It cannot be polymerised, at least not in any way known to science, and still retain the chemical properties of propane. To put this another way, any polymerisation of propane, should it ever be found to be possible, would not still leave you with propane. Consider, for example, what the result would be of bringing two molecules of propane together and joining them �end-to-end�, kicking out a molecule of hydrogen at the same time. The result would have the chemical formula C6H14 and the structural formula of hexane. Indeed, it would be hexane, not �propane dimer� and have different properties to propane. For starter�s, hexane is a liquid at room temperature and propane is a gas.
Cont.
Lord Molly
cont.
I think you are getting confused as to what polymerisation actually is. Consider the simplest polymerisation, that of the hydrocarbon gas ethene (or ethylene, for our older ABers). The polymer formed from its polymerisation is polyethene (commonly known as polythene). I think you will agree that polythene has properties that are distinctly different from those of ethene.
Apologies if I�ve managed to confuse you further!
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