None. Water does contains only hydrogen and oxygen, so there is no carbon. Further more, all the bonding in water is sigma bonding; there is no pi bonding.
It has one sigma bond and two pi bonds
C-C sigma bonds in acetone : 2 C-H bonds in water : 0 C-O bonds in water : 0 C-O sigma bonds in propanol : 1 C-C pi bonds in methanol : 0
39 sigma and 6 pi bonds
No, Water does not have a pi bond. The molecular formula of water is H2O in which 2 hydrogen is linked with oxygen. Since hydrogen has only one electron, it can make only sigma bond with oxygen.
Two pi bonds and one sigma bond.
There are 2 pi bonds in lactic acid.
Two pi bonds and one sigma bond.
Phenol has 6 sigma bonds and 1 pi bond.
Benzene has 3 pi bonds. These pi bonds are formed by the overlapping of p orbitals in the carbon atoms that make up the benzene ring.
C6H6, also known as benzene, consists of 3 pi bonds. These pi bonds are located in the delocalized pi electron cloud above and below the ring of carbon atoms.
Well sigma bonds are a single bond basically, and pi-bonds are double. In a nutshell if you count them there are 16 total bonds. In a pi-bond you have sigma bonds as well so for sigma there are 16. For pi bonds there are 2!
None. pi bonds are double our triple bonds, or pi clouds above and below aromatic rings such as benezene. Single bonds are sigma bonds