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Hydrogen Bonds can be broken easy, Covalent Bonds are hard to break apart, but both are needed to hold different parts of DNA strands together
yes exaly
There are no hydrogen bonds in HF.
It is not covalent, because it is the strongest type. The Correct answer is van der Waals.
Ionic and covalent bonds are both chemical bonds formed by either sharing or transferring electrons. Hydrogen bonds are technically not a kind of chemical bond but a kind of intermolecular attraction between polar molecules in which hydrogen is bonded to one of the very electronegative elements nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine.
It is the hydrogen wich bonds between AT and GC the difference is in the number AT have 2 hydrogen bonds GC have 3 hydrogen bonds
Hydrogen Bonds can be broken easy, Covalent Bonds are hard to break apart, but both are needed to hold different parts of DNA strands together
yes exaly
Hydrogen bonds and covalent bonds are two completely different things. Covalent bonds share an electron, while hydrogen bonds (just for water molecules) act like magnets- the Oxygen atom has a slight negative charge and it "attracts" the Hydrogen atoms, which have a slight positive charge.
Ionic bonds, Covalent bonds, Hydrogen bonds, Polar Covalent bonds, Non-Polar Covalent bonds, and Metallic bonds.
this because the chemical reaction between Oxygen & Hydrogen obviously the Hydrogen bonds between Oxygen & Hydrogen.
A hydrogen acceptors for hydrogen bonds is nitrogen.
Hydrogen bond is not so strong; it is a bond between hydrogen and a very electronegative atom as nitrogen, fluorine, oxygen.
Hydrogen bonds
hydrogen bonds
There are no hydrogen bonds in HF.
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