Yes and there are many examples. When nitrogen and oxygen bond together it is by covalent bonds. Similarly, Oxygen and Fluorine bond together in the same way. Above all, the whole field of organic chemistry is about non-metals bonding together covalently.
Some other examples: CO2, O2, N2.
Covalent bonds
they are put together in bonds; ionic bonds which are metal to nonmetal or covalent bonds which are non metal to nonmetal. Ionic bonds transfer electrons and covalent bonds share electrons
nonmetal with nonmetal pair of electrons is shared between 2 atoms
When atoms are bonded together with covalent bonds, the result is a molecule.
A covalent compound
Covalent bonds
Covalent bonds
Metal atoms.
Molecules typically refer to atoms that are bound together by covalent bonds. This is the sharing of an electron pair between two nonmetal atoms.
they are put together in bonds; ionic bonds which are metal to nonmetal or covalent bonds which are non metal to nonmetal. Ionic bonds transfer electrons and covalent bonds share electrons
The outer shell electrons of the atom form covalent bonds.
nonmetal with nonmetal pair of electrons is shared between 2 atoms
When atoms are bonded together with covalent bonds, the result is a molecule.
Covalent bonds hold atoms together. Ionic bonds hold ions together
Covalent bonds
covalent bonds.
Bonds hold atoms together. There are hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, and covalent bonds.