It is not a polar compound.It cannot make H bonds
it has four covalent bonds and four hydrogen atoms in it you dumbo
The answer is Yes and No: Yes, ionic bond in (strong) acids like HCl. No, in CH4 methane they all are covalent bonds
A covalent bond due to the fact that they are both non-metals
CH4 represents a molecule, not a bond at all. The bonds within this molecule are covalent.
The reason why NH3 and H20 can form a coordinate covalent bond with H but CH4 cannot do so is because methane (CH4) only forms single bonds. Hydrogen (H) can form more than one bond.
No. this is an example of covalent bond, not hydrogen bond
yes it does
yes, methane is CH4
There five atoms in CH4.One carbon and four Hydrogen.
There is a carbon atom.4 hydrogen atoms are bond to it
it has four covalent bonds and four hydrogen atoms in it you dumbo
Molecular formula: CH4 Structural formula: . H H C H . H CH4 (1 carbon and 4 hydrogen) it is NOT ch4 it is CH4; 4 being a subscript indicating 4 hydrogen atoms bonded into a single carbon atom
Hydrogen bonding usually occurs between molecules that have a hydrogen atom bonded to either Fluorine, Oxygen or Nitrogen. So technically CH4 cannot hydrogen bond (certainly not between it's own molecules). However a recent A-Level exam paper had a multiple choice question which said that CH4 molecules CAN hydrogen bond with itself.
the molecule is non-polar the CH bonds are also non-polar
The answer is Yes and No: Yes, ionic bond in (strong) acids like HCl. No, in CH4 methane they all are covalent bonds
A covalent bond due to the fact that they are both non-metals
in chemistry, it would signify some kind of hydrogen/carbon bond eg: Methane - CH4