No. Although the bonds in H2O are covalent, they are not coordinate covalent bonds.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
When H+ forms a bond with H2O to form H3O+ the extra bond to oxygen is sometimes called a coordinate covalent bond (alternative name dative bond ) as both electrons that form the bond originate on the oxygen. Once formed the bond is identical to the other two covalent bonds.
MgF2 and NaCl are ionic. NH3 and H2O contain polar covalent bonds. N2 contains non polar covalent bond.
H2o
no, H2O is a covalent compound
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
When H+ forms a bond with H2O to form H3O+ the extra bond to oxygen is sometimes called a coordinate covalent bond (alternative name dative bond ) as both electrons that form the bond originate on the oxygen. Once formed the bond is identical to the other two covalent bonds.
MgF2 and NaCl are ionic. NH3 and H2O contain polar covalent bonds. N2 contains non polar covalent bond.
H2o
H2o
no, H2O is a covalent compound
H2O has a covalent bond between Hydrogen and Oxygen atoms. They share electrons and hence achieve noble gas configuration. The covalent bond present is a polar bond.
The O-H bond is covalent.
The bond formed with carbon is essentially the covalent bond. So all the organic molecules in your body has got covalent bond.
The formula H2O represents a covalent bond. In water (H2O), the oxygen atom shares electrons with two hydrogen atoms by forming covalent bonds. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms.
CH4
H2O has polar covalent bonds, not non-polar covalent bonds.