There are _no_ fluorine atoms.
Rather, there are four chlorine atoms.
Hydrogen tetrachloride is not an existing molecule.
Carbon tetrachloride is a tetrahedron, "tetrachloride " only means "something with four chlorides", and that is too vague.
Fluorine forms a molecule consisting of two fluorine atoms, which is symbolized as F2.
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.
A H2O molecule is bent and a CCl4 is tetrahedral.
Five.
The bond in carbon tetrachloride are polar covalent, but the CCl4 molecule a a whole is nonpolar due to the symmetrical arrangement oft he bonds.
The shape of the Silicon tetrachloride molecule is tetrahedral, a very symmetrical form.
NaCl will not dissolve in CCl4 is a polar molecule and polar molecule will only dissolve other polar molecules. As the same goes for non polar molecules.
intermolecular forces
Carbon and chlorine; the chemical formula is CCl4, meaning that there is one carbon atom with 4 chlorines attached to it.
No. Fluorine is an element. Two atoms of the same element will not form a polar bond because there is no difference in electronegativity.