the answer is yes, because every livinf thing needs oxygen to breath and with out oxygen we wouldn't be able to live
Carbon dioxide has polar molecular bonds. However, in overall, it is a non polar, linear molecule.
In carbon dioxide (CO2), the two carbon-oxygen bonds are oriented symmetrically around the carbon atom, resulting in the bond dipoles canceling each other out. This leads to a nonpolar molecule overall, even though the individual carbon-oxygen bond is polar due to differences in electronegativity between carbon and oxygen.
Carbon dioxide has two types of covalent bonds: one carbon-oxygen double bond and two carbon-oxygen single bonds. The double bond involves the sharing of two pairs of electrons between the carbon and one of the oxygen atoms, while the single bonds involve the sharing of one electron pair between the carbon and each of the remaining oxygen atoms.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a polar molecule,thus containing polar covalent bond. This is because of the difference in electronegativities of its two atoms (C and O). The electronegativity of oxygen (3.5) is higher than that of carbon (2.5). As a result, there is unequal distribution of electronic cloud between two atoms. the shared electron pairs will be much closer to oxygen atoms than carbon. Contributed by Muhammad Afzal m.o.h.afzal@hotmail.co.uk
Carbon dioxide contains non-polar bonds because the molecule is linear and symmetrical, resulting in equal sharing of electrons between carbon and oxygen atoms. This balanced distribution of electrons means there is no significant charge separation to create a polarity in the molecule.
Carbon dioxide
A carbon dioxide molecule is made of 2 oxygen atoms and 1 carbon atom.
Carbon dioxide is a covalent compound. It is made up of two nonmetal elements, carbon and oxygen, which share electrons to form covalent bonds between them.
Carbon dioxide is a non-polar molecule containing polar covalent bonds in its atoms.
Covalent because it is between 2 nonmetals and it could also be a polar covalent
non-polar molecule
CO2 , carbon dioxide (2 linear, opposite dipoles O=C=O)