The answer is yes, because molecules get polarity after forming polar covlent bond,no such polar molecules can exist which do not contain polar covalent bond. Am I right?
Molecules that contain two covalent bonds are sometimes polar.
A solvent is polar if its molecules contain highly polar covalent bonds, for example water, or ionic bonds, for example molten salt.
Diatomic molecules have non-polar covalent bonds and are non-polar molecules
Sulfur dioxide is a polar molecules with polar covalent bonds.
its iconic
Molecules that contain two covalent bonds are sometimes polar.
Within a water molecule is covalent bonds. between water molecules are hydrogen bonds.
A solvent is polar if its molecules contain highly polar covalent bonds, for example water, or ionic bonds, for example molten salt.
Diatomic molecules have non-polar covalent bonds and are non-polar molecules
A solvent is polar if its molecules contain highly polar covalent bonds, for example water, or ionic bonds, for example molten salt.
Sulfur dioxide is a polar molecules with polar covalent bonds.
its iconic
Organic molecules all contain covalent bonds. It is possible, though not common, to have an ionic bond as well as covalent bonds in a molecule.
Organic molecules that contain atoms with a higher/lower electronegativity than C will contain polar covalent bonds. Obvious examples are molecules with O atoms e.g. alcohols, ketones, ethers.
Within the molecule, the bonds are covalent bonds. Between water molecules, they're hydrogen bonds.
Generally a polar molecules (as salts) have an ionic bond.
Covalent molecules which contain only bonds between elements of similar electronegativity. For example: Carbon and hydrogen. They must not contain polar bonds like Oxygen and hydrogen.