Yes, the two are the same element and equal sharing of electrons are present
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
A molecule can have a completely nonpolar covalent bond when two atoms of the same element form the bond.
nonpolar!
A single (nonpolar) covalent joins the carbon atom to each of the hydrogen atoms.
In a nonpolar covalent bond the difference between the electronegativities of the two atoms are not significant.
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
Electrons in nonpolar covalent bonds are shared equally between the atoms involved. Covalent bonds between atoms of the same element display this kind of bond. However, bonds between atoms of different atoms can be nonpolar as well. Such bonds include the covalent bond between carbon and hydrogen.
Yes, carbon does make a nonpolar covalent bond with other atoms. They are unable to have dipole moments due to having almost the same electronegativity.
A molecule can have a completely nonpolar covalent bond when two atoms of the same element form the bond.
nonpolar!
A single (nonpolar) covalent joins the carbon atom to each of the hydrogen atoms.
In a nonpolar covalent bond the difference between the electronegativities of the two atoms are not significant.
Nonpolar covalent bond
nonpolar
If the atoms in a covalent bond share electrons equally, the bond is nonpolar.
A "nonpolar" covalent bond.
Nonpolar covalent bonds, with equal sharing of the bond electrons, arise when the electronegativities of the two atoms are equal.