No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
No, hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force.
convalent bonding
false***Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. Not a bond.
No. Hydrogen bonding is a form of strong intermolecular attraction
The intermolecular bond in methanol is hydrogen bonding due to the presence of hydrogen atoms bonded to oxygen. This results in methanol molecules being attracted to each other through strong dipole-dipole interactions.
Hydrogen bonding is really not bonding, but only a polar interaction. H2 [diatomic hydrogen] is an elemental bond in which gas atoms can cohabit.
It depends really which kind of bonding you're talking about. If your talking about ionic, covalent and hydrogen bonds here are some examples but don't exactly use these: Ionic Bonding An ionic bond is like a boy and girl. Covalent Bonding A covalent bond is like playing with a ball. Hydrogen Bonding Hydrogen Bonding is like picking lab partners. -From a fellow student working on the output on 14L.......
The hydrogen bonding in hydrogen bromide is weak because it involves a hydrogen atom bonded to a highly electronegative atom (bromine), which results in a partial positive charge on the hydrogen atom. This partial positive charge allows the hydrogen atom to form a weak interaction with another electronegative atom.
I would imagine Hydrogen Bond. It is hydrogen bond because hydrogen fluoride and water have a large dipole. The electronegative atom attracts electrons away from the hydrogen atom leaving the hydrogen atom almost unshielded proton with a partial positive charge.
I believe the qustion should read "what is a covalent bond". A covalent bond is a bonding interaction that comes about due to the effects of quantum mechanics and involves the sharing of electrons. Contrast this with an ionic bond that can be understood based on classical electrostatic forces.
covalent bonding
double bond