It depends what compound it is in. In water it is covalent. In trichloracetic acid it is ionic.
Water is not any kind of bond. Water is a molecule with polar covalent bonds occurring between the oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms. Water molecules can form hydrogen bonds between them or with other substances.
A covalent bond.
A hydrogen bond.
Single covalent bond :)
hydrogen, polar
hydrogen bond
There is little evidence of such a compound.
Water is not any kind of bond. Water is a molecule with polar covalent bonds occurring between the oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms. Water molecules can form hydrogen bonds between them or with other substances.
A covalent bond.
A hydrogen bond.
Hydrogen bonding is usually formed between one lone pair of electrons of the oxygen atom of one water molecule and the hydrogen atom of another water molecule. Hydrogen bonding forms as a result of electro-negativity difference between oxygen atom and hydrogen, with oxygen being more electro-negative.
Single covalent bond :)
These are covalent bonds.
covalent bond between carbon-carbon and carbon-hydrogen
hydrogen, polar
Hydrogen bonds form between the partially positive hydrogen atoms of one water molecule, and the partially negative oxygen atom of another water molecule.
Water or H2O consists of 2 atoms of hydrogen and 1 atom of oxygen. The type of bond is covalent. Covalent bonds are bonds created between two non-metals. The molecule is also polar. 2 atoms that are connected by a covalent bond may exert different attractions for the electrons of the bond. In such cases the bond is polar, with one end slightly negatively charged (-) and the other slightly positively charged (+).