no
No, Hydrogen can only bond to one Oxygen.
A hydroxide molecule has one bond between the oxygen and hydrogen atoms. The hydrogen atom donates its electron to form a bond with the oxygen atom, resulting in a covalent bond between the two atoms.
Hydrogen molecule doesn't have any hydrogen bonds. It only has one bond between the hydrogen atoms and that too is a covalent bond. A Hydrogen bond is a weak interaction between a hydrogen atom and a highly electronegative atom such as oxygen, Fluorine etc.It is not actual bonding.
it is a polar covalent bond. Scince oxygen does not follow the octet rule(only 8 electrons, needs ten) and hydrogen has one electron, two hydrogen electrons plus eight oxygen electrons equal ten :)
A hydrogen bond is a very strong dipole-dipole bond. A hydrogen bond can only form between hydrogen and a strong electromagnetic atom; fluorine, oxygen or chlorine.
Dipole-dipole attraction. It isn't really a bond that is formed, but an attraction between opposite charges. The only time polar molecules are attracted via a hydrogen bond (which isn't really a bond either) is if the hydrogen is attached to either a nitrogen (N), oxygen (O) or fluoride (F) atom.
It depends completely upon which compound it is. Some have more Hydrogen bonds than others, and hydrogen can only bond to certain elements, such as Nitrogen and Oxygen, to make a hydrogen bond.
Those molecules cannot bond. hydrogen can only have one bond, while oxygen must have two.O=ODouble bondH-O-Htwo single bonds
Hydrogen bonding occurs between a hydrogen atom covalently bonded to a highly electronegative atom (such as oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine) and a nearby electronegative atom in another molecule. The hydrogen atom should be bonded to the electronegative atom by a polar covalent bond. The presence of these elements and specific bond configurations allows for hydrogen bonding interactions to occur.
No, CCl2F2 (carbon tetrachloride) does not have hydrogen bonds because it does not contain hydrogen atoms directly bonded to highly electronegative atoms like oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine, which are necessary for hydrogen bonding to occur. Carbon tetrachloride only has polar covalent bonds due to the differences in electronegativity between carbon and chlorine or fluorine atoms.
Chlorine cannot form a hydrogen bond only Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Flourine can
No. The H2O molecule contains only single covalent bonds.