None. An alkane contains only single covalent bonds.
The simplest alkane, methane (CH4), has 4 covalent bonds. So for the first carbon, start with 4 covalent bonds and then add 3 of each carbon after that.
None. The property of all alkanes is that they contain only C-H single bonds and C-C single bonds. If a compound contains double C to C bonds it is classified as an alkene not an alkane.
12 single bonds, 4 double bonds
mostly double bonds and triple bonds
Single, double, and triple covalent bonds
The simplest alkane, methane (CH4), has 4 covalent bonds. So for the first carbon, start with 4 covalent bonds and then add 3 of each carbon after that.
None. The property of all alkanes is that they contain only C-H single bonds and C-C single bonds. If a compound contains double C to C bonds it is classified as an alkene not an alkane.
A haloalkane has the same number of covalent bonds as the corrresponding unhalogenated alkane.
Nitrogen tetroxide has four double covalent bonds.
12 single bonds, 4 double bonds
4 single bonds! or variations with double bonds!!
mostly double bonds and triple bonds
Single, double, and triple covalent bonds
There are four bonds.All are covalent bonds.
Carbon can form four covalent bonds at most, such as in methane.
Nitrogen can form single, double, and triple covalent bonds.
BaBr2 has two ionic bonds, but no covalent bonds.