Carbon tetrahydride, more commonly known as 'METHANE (CH4)' is a covalently bonded molecule.
Carbon tetrahydride is an unusual name for methane. Because carbon and hydrogen have similar electronegativities the bond between C-H is covalent.
Diboron tetrahydride (B2H4) is a covalent compound. It consists of sharing of electrons between boron and hydrogen atoms, making it a covalent bond.
No, carbon and oxygen typically do not form an ionic bond. Carbon and oxygen are both nonmetals that tend to form covalent bonds rather than ionic bonds. In an ionic bond, electrons are completely transferred from one atom to another, while in a covalent bond, the electrons are shared.
carbon monoxide is a covalent bond... covalent bonds involve non-metal with non-metal bonding... carbon and oxygen r non-metals...hence carbon oxide is a covalent bond...
covalent, there two non-metals, ionic's only between two metals.
Carbon tetrahydride is an unusual name for methane. Because carbon and hydrogen have similar electronegativities the bond between C-H is covalent.
Diboron tetrahydride (B2H4) is a covalent compound. It consists of sharing of electrons between boron and hydrogen atoms, making it a covalent bond.
No it is not. Carbon is a covalent bond.
Carbon tetrachloride is a covalent bond.
covalent
Well, the bond between carbon and nitrogen is covalent, whilst the bond between potassium and the cyanide is ionic.
Covalent, specifically polar covalent with no dipole moment.
polar covalent
No. Carbon does not form ionic bonds, and in this case they are double-covalent bonds.
No, carbon and oxygen typically do not form an ionic bond. Carbon and oxygen are both nonmetals that tend to form covalent bonds rather than ionic bonds. In an ionic bond, electrons are completely transferred from one atom to another, while in a covalent bond, the electrons are shared.
carbon monoxide is a covalent bond... covalent bonds involve non-metal with non-metal bonding... carbon and oxygen r non-metals...hence carbon oxide is a covalent bond...
If it bonds with a metal then its ionic. if it bonds with a nonmetal then is covalent.