greatly...its what gives water its unique properties
No, as there is no electronegative atom to form hydrogen bond.
Yea,it has hydrogen bonding
yes.
Hydrogen fluoride HF has the strongest hydrogen bonding. Water H2O and ammonia NH3 have the next strongest hydrogen bonding.
flourine oxygen and nitrogen forms hydrogen bonding with hydrogen
nope, there's no hydrogen bonding because the hydrogen is not bonding whit any fluorine, just with the carbon
H20 is water.HF is hydrogen fluoride.NH3 is ammonia.
Hydrogen bonding
Hydrogen fluoride HF has the strongest hydrogen bonding. Water H2O and ammonia NH3 have the next strongest hydrogen bonding.
H20 is the molecular composition of water. Two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. The hydrogen atoms are pulled to the oxygen atom through forces called hydrogen bonding.
flourine oxygen and nitrogen forms hydrogen bonding with hydrogen
everything depends on the Hydrogen bonding which creates long chains of molecules in water, but this is not possible in Methane.
H and O have much electro negativity difference.H and S do not have much difference to make H bonds.
hydrogen bonding
Yes, H2O is a polar molecule so it would have dipole-dipole forces as well as hydrogen bonding and London dispersion forces.
H20
H20
Hydrogen. The lightest element.
nope, there's no hydrogen bonding because the hydrogen is not bonding whit any fluorine, just with the carbon
H20 is water.HF is hydrogen fluoride.NH3 is ammonia.