Hydrogen tetrachloride is not an existing molecule.
carbon-hydrogen bonds of alkanes are not polar.
Yes...hydrogen fluoride (HF) has polar covalent bonds
Tin tetrachloride is a tetrahedral molecule that is nonpolar. The individual Sn-Cl bonds are polar, but the shape of the molecule, similar to carbon tetrachloride, makes the molecule itself nonpolar.
Within the molecule, the bonds are covalent bonds. Between water molecules, they're hydrogen bonds.
CC14 is nothing. CCl4 is carbon tetrachloride. Carbon tet is a non-polar tetrahedral molecule with 4 covalent bonds.
carbon-hydrogen bonds of alkanes are not polar.
Yes...hydrogen fluoride (HF) has polar covalent bonds
Tin tetrachloride is a tetrahedral molecule that is nonpolar. The individual Sn-Cl bonds are polar, but the shape of the molecule, similar to carbon tetrachloride, makes the molecule itself nonpolar.
The molecular shape of carbon tetrachloride is a tetrahedron, which negates the polarity of individual bonds, and makes the molecule non-polar.
Hydrogen bonds occur between polar molecules such as water.
Within the molecule, the bonds are covalent bonds. Between water molecules, they're hydrogen bonds.
Ionic bonds, Covalent bonds, Hydrogen bonds, Polar Covalent bonds, Non-Polar Covalent bonds, and Metallic bonds.
Hydrogen bonds
No it does not have,. there are polar bonds.
no
Hydrogen bonds, Ionic bonds, and Polar bonds!
polar bonds and asymmetrical structure