H2O is actually a polar molecule. The molecule can split into two ions: H+ and OH-
No. H2O is very polar.
No, H2O is a very polar molecule
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
Water is both a compound and a molecule.
It is a polar molecule.
Lipid are nonpolar molecules that is not soluble in water.
No, H2O is a very polar molecule
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
I will assume Hsub2O is H2O [water] Water is a polar molecule.
It is polar because it is asymmetrical
H-H
H2O is a polar molecule; +H3O is even more so.
polar
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
true
water is polar. That's why there's surface tension, because the positive side of one molecule is attracted to the negative side of another, so the molecules tend to stick together.
One term refers only to the bond, another refers to the molecule.