Yes. Hydrogen bromide shows dipole-dipole interactions.
yes.
FON Remember this as it mean only hydrogen bonded to fluorine, oxygen and nitrogen will exhibit hydrogen bonding H2O ( water ) = hydrogen bonding as hydrogen is bonded to oxygen CO ( carbon monoxide ) = no hydrogen bonding Think electronegative differences.
The bond between hydrogen and fluorine is polar covalent and it can exhibit hydrogen bonding.
molecule cotaining hydrogen and electronegative atoms form hydrogen bonding
This is because chloroform can hydrogen bond with acetone
no
-1 in bromide (most common). It can exhibit oxidation numbers from -1 to +7 (in HBrO4)
yes.
FON Remember this as it mean only hydrogen bonded to fluorine, oxygen and nitrogen will exhibit hydrogen bonding H2O ( water ) = hydrogen bonding as hydrogen is bonded to oxygen CO ( carbon monoxide ) = no hydrogen bonding Think electronegative differences.
Generally speaking 'like dissolves like' so when you thinking if a molecule can dissolve in a particular solvent, you need to decide what type of bonding that solvent can exhibit and what bonding the molecule in question exhibits. So for example water can exhibit hydrogen bonding. This means for something to be able soluble in water, it too needs to be able to exhibit hydrogen bonding. Methane only contains hydrogen and carbon and thus, will not exhibit hydrogen bonding. However, methanol has carbon, hydrogen and oxygen and therefore, can exhibit hydrogen bonding. As a result, using the 'like dissolve like' approach we can see why methane will be insoluble in water but methanol will be soluble.
The bond between hydrogen and fluorine is polar covalent and it can exhibit hydrogen bonding.
According to the definition, to form a hydrogen bond, a bond with hydrogen and another element should have a higher value for electronegativity such as H-N, H-O and H-F. H-Cl does not meet with sufficient polarity to form a hydrogen bond.
molecule cotaining hydrogen and electronegative atoms form hydrogen bonding
This is because chloroform can hydrogen bond with acetone
Covalent bonding and some of these bonds (C-O and O-H) are polar.
Within the molecule itself, water exhibits ionic bonding. Between the water molecules, there is hydrogen bonding.
There is no mention of Lord Capulet being on a crutch in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." However, he does exhibit signs of old age and frailty at times, particularly in his interactions with his daughter Juliet.