water has stronger hydrogen bond
Hydrogen fluoride is a weak acid but it is by no means the weakest. It is actually stronger than most other weak acids. It is a weak acid because the H-F bond is fairly strong and difficult to break, so it only dissociates to a small degree in water.
The hydrogen fluoride (HF) is formed.
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In pure hydrogen fluoride, each bond is a highly polar covalent bond.
Hydrogen fluoride has a Polar-covalent bond although, while the difference in electronegativity is more than 1.7 ( we expected to be Ionic ).
Hydrogen fluoride as it is a hydrogen bond.
The two hydrogen-oxygen bonds in a water molecule allow it to form more hydrogen bonds with adjacent molecules than hydrogen fluoride can with its one hydrogen-fluorine bond. As a result, water has a stronger attraction between molecules.
I would imagine Hydrogen Bond. It is hydrogen bond because hydrogen fluoride and water have a large dipole. The electronegative atom attracts electrons away from the hydrogen atom leaving the hydrogen atom almost unshielded proton with a partial positive charge.
Hydrogen fluoride is a weak acid but it is by no means the weakest. It is actually stronger than most other weak acids. It is a weak acid because the H-F bond is fairly strong and difficult to break, so it only dissociates to a small degree in water.
The hydrogen fluoride (HF) is formed.
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Nope. Ethanoic has a stronger hydrogen bond
no
No, an ionic bond is considerably stronger than a hydrogen bond.
Hydrogen has a low electronegativity while fluorine has an extremely high electronegativity.
In pure hydrogen fluoride, each bond is a highly polar covalent bond.
Hydrogen fluoride has a Polar-covalent bond although, while the difference in electronegativity is more than 1.7 ( we expected to be Ionic ).