No. The bond order of a molecule depends on the center atom itself. For example, the bond order of carbon is 4, Nitrogen 3,etc.
There is NO 'one single bond' organic molecule possible.The simplest 'single bond' organic molecule is methane (CH4) with 4 (not one) single bonds (between central C and 4 H atoms).The only possible 'one double bond' organic molecule is carbon monoxide (C=O)
For every peptide bond there is one water molecule
A covalent bond that shares four electrons has a double bond between the atoms. A single bond is shown as a single dash, so a double bond is two dashes.
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Condensation or dehydration bond reaction forming a glycosidic bond. A -H from one sugar reacts with an -OH from the second sugar forming the bond and releasing one H2O molecule. Note the bonds do not have to be 1-4,eg. in sucrose the glucose is joined 1-2 to a fructose. In maltose the bond 1-4 between two glucoses.
Covalent bonds hold a dextrose molecule together.
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4
There is NO 'one single bond' organic molecule possible.The simplest 'single bond' organic molecule is methane (CH4) with 4 (not one) single bonds (between central C and 4 H atoms).The only possible 'one double bond' organic molecule is carbon monoxide (C=O)
A covalent bond
For every peptide bond there is one water molecule
Butyne has 4 carbons and a triple bond. The triple bond can be between C1 and C2, or C2 and C3 so there are 2 different "forms" or isomers of butyne.
A covalent bond that shares four electrons has a double bond between the atoms. A single bond is shown as a single dash, so a double bond is two dashes.
Because both silicon and oxygen 'share' electrons. As the oxidation state of Si is +4 and Oxyen is -2 4-2-2=0 So the sharing of the electrons in the atoms forms a stable molecule. And a covalent bond is the name for the sharing of electrons in a bond.
But-
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SnF4 wold be a nonpolar molecule, but it has polar covalent bonds. But since there are 4 of them, all equal, they cancel each other and thus the molecule itself is non polar.