No. There is no hydrogen bond in chloromethane.
CH3Cl is a polar bond. CH3Cl has a bond of three CH molecules and 1 bond of 1 C-Cl. The bond consists of a tetrahedral structural formation.
The molecule CH3Cl has covalent bonds. In all chemical bonds, the type of force involved is electromagnetic.
Yes. Examples are methyl chloride (chloromethane) CH3Cl, carbon tetrachloride, CCl4
K2S will have high boiling point than CH3Cl.
No. There is no hydrogen bond in chloromethane.
The molecule CH3Cl has covalent bonds. In all chemical bonds, the type of force involved is electromagnetic.
Polar Covalent
CH3Cl is a polar bond. CH3Cl has a bond of three CH molecules and 1 bond of 1 C-Cl. The bond consists of a tetrahedral structural formation.
The molecule CH3Cl has covalent bonds. In all chemical bonds, the type of force involved is electromagnetic.
NaNO3
Yes. Examples are methyl chloride (chloromethane) CH3Cl, carbon tetrachloride, CCl4
K2S will have high boiling point than CH3Cl.
I think you have a typo in your molecular formula but CH3Cl is a polar molecule and CCL4 is a non-polar molecule
Yes.
Yes. In CH3Cl, there is one C-Cl bond and three C-H bond.
CH4 + Cl2 → CH3Cl + HCl CH3Cl + Cl2 → CH2Cl2 + HCl CH2Cl2 + Cl2 → CHCl3 + HCl