It is almost similar to a covalent bond, the only difference is that the bonding air of electrons are donated by the same atom.
coordinate covalent
The transfer of an electron from one atom to another results in an ionic bond.
a coordinate covalent bond is formed by shearing of pair of electron in which one element work as DONNER and give to another element who works as ACCEPTOR and take one pair of electron to form coordinate covalent bond example NH4Cl a covalen bond is that in which mutual shearing of electron is done
the co-ordinate co-valent bond is different in that the bonding pair comes from only one of the atoms called the donor atom. The other atom, the acceptor atom, simply accepts the sharing responsibilities. An example of such a bond is as follows: NH3 + H+ ------> NH3--->H+
When H+ forms a bond with H2O to form H3O+ the extra bond to oxygen is sometimes called a coordinate covalent bond (alternative name dative bond ) as both electrons that form the bond originate on the oxygen. Once formed the bond is identical to the other two covalent bonds.
coordinate covalent
it depends on the reactant. and the bond could be colvalent, ionic, coordinate, hydrogen bond or a mixture of these.
covalent bond,coordinate bond and singlet bond
b)a coordinate covalent bond is a covalent bond in which one atom contributes both bonding electrons, In a coordinate covalent bond, the shared electron pair comes from one of the bonding atoms. Once formed, a coordinate covalent bond is like any other covalent bond
The transfer of an electron from one atom to another results in an ionic bond.
a coordinate covalent bond is formed by shearing of pair of electron in which one element work as DONNER and give to another element who works as ACCEPTOR and take one pair of electron to form coordinate covalent bond example NH4Cl a covalen bond is that in which mutual shearing of electron is done
by the donation of electron pairs from one element to other element
the co-ordinate co-valent bond is different in that the bonding pair comes from only one of the atoms called the donor atom. The other atom, the acceptor atom, simply accepts the sharing responsibilities. An example of such a bond is as follows: NH3 + H+ ------> NH3--->H+
Covalent bonds and dative (coordinate) bonds are formed are formed by sharing electrons between the bonding atoms.
When H+ forms a bond with H2O to form H3O+ the extra bond to oxygen is sometimes called a coordinate covalent bond (alternative name dative bond ) as both electrons that form the bond originate on the oxygen. Once formed the bond is identical to the other two covalent bonds.
Carbon forms covalent bond (in all organic compounds), inorganic bond (in metal carbides) and coordinate bond (in metal carbonyls).Carbon does not form metallic bond or hydrogen bond.
Covalent bonds and dative (coordinate) bonds are formed are formed by sharing electrons between the bonding atoms.