Water molecules H2O consist of two hydrogens each joined to a central oxygen attom by covalent bonds.
Water molecules stick to one another by hydrogen bonds, but these are not permanent bonds in the liquid.
None.H-O-O-HA rough molecular representation of hydrogen peroxide showing all single covalent bonds. No ionic bonding here.
Hydrogen is involved in covalent bonds but sometimes also in ionic bonds.
The two main types of chemical bonds are ionic and covalent.
No, hydrogen bonds are weak in comparison to both ionic and covalent bonds.
Three types of chemical bonds found in living things are ionic bonds, covalent bonds, and hydrogen bonds. Ionic bonds involve the transfer of electrons between atoms, covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms, and hydrogen bonds involve the attraction between a slightly positive hydrogen atom and a slightly negative atom.
If you mean is the bond in hydrogen gas, H2 ionic then the answer is no.
Covalent bonds form molecules where ionic bonds form ionic lattices. Hydrogen bonds are a form of intermolecular bonds which are formed with the participation of polar hydrogen atoms which are attached to either nitrogen, oxygen or fluorine.
Hydrogen bonds with hydrogen bond acceptor atoms such as Oxygen. Covalent bonds with nearly anything.
Hydrogen is an element, not a bond. It can form bonds, which are usually covalent, but an ionic bond with hydrogen is possible, for example, lithium hydride is an ionic compound. While this, like every compound, does have its own distinctive features, I would not call it a special form of ionic bond.
No they are significantly weaker.
Hydrogen Chloride (the gas) has covalent bonds, but Hydrochloric acid forms ionic bonds. As to why this occurs, I am clueless
Hydrogen bonds, Ionic bonds, and Polar bonds!