No, it is not ionic. HF is covalent.
H2 Hydrogen gas has one single covalent bond in between the two hydrogen atoms. some other molecules also have the single covalent bonds as HF,HCl,HBr and HI.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
Yes but it is polar
The molecule is covalent, the N-F bonds are polar covalent.
No, it is not ionic. HF is covalent.
Any molecule with two non metal atoms (HCl, HF or O2 as examples) form a covalent bond between the bonding atoms.
HF and CN- have covalent bonds.
HF is not an oxyacid; no oxygen in the molecule.
H2 Hydrogen gas has one single covalent bond in between the two hydrogen atoms. some other molecules also have the single covalent bonds as HF,HCl,HBr and HI.
H2 Hydrogen gas has one single covalent bond in between the two hydrogen atoms. some other molecules also have the single covalent bonds as HF,HCl,HBr and HI.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
That statement is incorrect. HF is a polar molecule because fluorine is more electronegative than hydrogen, causing the electron density to be pulled closer to the fluorine atom. As a result, HF has a partial positive charge on the hydrogen atom and a partial negative charge on the fluorine atom.
Hydrogen fluoride is a colourless gas with chemical formula HF. It is a covalent compound with one hydrogen and one fluorine atom per molecule.
A covalent molecule
Yes but it is polar
The molecule is covalent, the N-F bonds are polar covalent.