Chlorine Whoever put this your wrong. The answers are Chlorine, Flourine, and Carbon.
Bonds between carbon and hydrogen are non-polar.
carbon dioxide
Carbon monoxide has a polar covalent bond.
Flourine is made up of atoms. Flourine is a chemical element and dose not contain anything other than fluorine atoms.
The electronegativity of an element is important in figuring out how polar a molecule will be. The higher the electronegativity of an element is compared to another, the more polar the molecule will be. For example, a bond between Flourine and Hydrogen will be very polar, because Flourine has a very high electronegativity, and hydrogen has a very low electronegativity.
hydrochloroflourocarbons it is made of hydrogen,flourine,chlorine and carbon atoms
it's polar
carbon-hydrogen bonds of alkanes are not polar.
The molecule of carbon dioxide is non-polar in nature. However, the carbon and oxygen bonds in it are polar in nature.
# Carbon # Oxygen # Nitrogen # Sulphur # Phosphorus # Chlorine # Iodine # Flourine # Bromine
Carbon monoxide has a polar molecule.
CCl4 is not polar. But CHCl3 is polar.
It is not polar. only the bonds between the chlorine and carbon are polar
it is polar (inorganic) molecule
Carbon hydrogen trichloride, more commonly called trichloromethane or chloroform is polar.
Carbon dioxide