Question detail

What happens to the covalent bonds in small molecular substances during melting?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

How bonding and structure are related to the properties of substances

Question

  1. A. They are broken
  2. B. They are formed
  3. C. They remain intact
  4. D. They become ionic bonds

Answer

The correct option is They remain intact. This answer is correct because it matches the approved learning objective to identify intermolecular forces as the forces overcome when small molecular substances melt or boil in the subtopic Properties of small molecules.

Explanation

The correct option is They remain intact. They remain intact is correct because it directly supports the approved learning objective to identify intermolecular forces as the forces overcome when small molecular substances melt or boil. This belongs to the subtopic Properties of small molecules within How bonding and structure are related to the properties of substances, so the explanation must stay tied to that curriculum context. The other options are incorrect because they either do not answer this learning objective, use a vague statement, or move away from Properties of small molecules.

Common mistake

Confusing Intermolecular Forces with Covalent Bonds

Students often state that covalent bonds are broken when small molecular substances melt or boil.

Students should clarify that it is the weak intermolecular forces that are overcome during melting or boiling, not the covalent bonds within the molecules.

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understanding MCQ 4: molecular substances melt or boil. | How… | ExamCompanion