Sure does, Think of every molecule of water as a little man climbing up the stem of plants and every molecule holding the hand of the molecule below it and pulling in the upward direction.
Each water molecule pulls on other water molecules as water is transpired from the leaves of the plant. This allows free movement of water throughout the plant.
Each water molecule pulls on other water molecules as water is transpired from the leaves of the plant. This allows free movement of water throughout the plant.
No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
hydrogen bonds
Fresh water does actually help plants grow! (Um... heard of rain?) In fact, fresh water is the best water for plants to help them grow. Salt water can be a bit to extreme for plants, and can cause them to wilt. Salt water is great for sea plants, like sea weed or coral reef, but most plants grow better around fresh water.
Nitrogen bases bond by the help of covalent or hydrogen bonds
As long as the hydrogen is attached to Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen the bonding will be a hydrogen bond.
It supports its grow
Each water molecule pulls on other water molecules as water is transpired from the leaves of the plant. This allows free movement of water throughout the plant.
Each water molecule pulls on other water molecules as water is transpired from the leaves of the plant. This allows free movement of water throughout the plant.
No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
Hydrogen bonding is the attraction of H atoms in the water molecule (slight + charge) to O atoms in a neighboring water molecule (slight - charge); it is a weak interatomic force. But it is still strong enough to help the water molecules "stick" together.
hydrogen bonds
Sugars consist of the elements carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Plants produce sugar from those elements absorbed by their leaves and roots from carbon compounds and water, and with the help of chlorophyll as a catalyst.
Fresh water does actually help plants grow! (Um... heard of rain?) In fact, fresh water is the best water for plants to help them grow. Salt water can be a bit to extreme for plants, and can cause them to wilt. Salt water is great for sea plants, like sea weed or coral reef, but most plants grow better around fresh water.
no, because if a hydrogen atom WERE to donate an electron, it would no longer be a hydrogen atom. plus a donation of electrons or an other subatomic particle could only be possible through the help of human research.
"Hydrogen bonding" is something of a misnomer - it does not actually constitute a chemical bond, be it ionic or covalent. Hydrogen bonding is actually an intermolecular force - an attractive force between molecules. Hydrogen bonding occurs when a molecule has hydrogen bonded to an electronegative atom. Oxygen and nitrogen are the most common examples. The electronegative atom pulls on the electrons between itself and hydrogen (that constitute their bond), which leaves the hydrogen with a little bit of positive charge. This positive charge is then electrostatically attracted to things bearing negative charges (such as those oxygen or nitrogen atoms). Having hydrogen bonding affects various properties. Molecules that can hydrogen bond generally have higher boiling points and melting points than similar molecules that cannot. Being able to hydrogen bond helps with solvation in polar solvents such as water. Take proteins for example. Proteins, which are long assemblages of amino acids, often contain groups along them that can hydrogen bond. These attractive forces along its side can help to maintain the three dimensional structure of that protein.