No. this is an example of covalent bond, not hydrogen bond
Methane (CH4) is a greenhouse gas twenty times more powerful that Carbon dioxide (CO2).
The chemical symbol for methane is CH4.
No they are five atoms.It is not diatomic.
C-H bond of CH4 is polar.It is a covalent bond
yes, methane is CH4
CH4
Methane CH4
The answer is Yes and No: Yes, ionic bond in (strong) acids like HCl. No, in CH4 methane they all are covalent bonds
Methane has covalent bonds.
No. this is an example of covalent bond, not hydrogen bond
Methane is CH4
CH4, methane is covalently bonded
Molecular formula: CH4 Structural formula: . H H C H . H CH4 (1 carbon and 4 hydrogen) it is NOT ch4 it is CH4; 4 being a subscript indicating 4 hydrogen atoms bonded into a single carbon atom
no
The conjugate base of methane (CH4) is the methyl carbanion (CH3-). Because methane is an extremely weak acid, the methyl carbanion is an EXTREMELY STRONG BASE. Compounds like methyl lithium (CH3Li) are, in fact, considered organometallic superbases and will violently deprotonate even the weakest acids (such as water and ammonia).
Methane (CH4) is a greenhouse gas twenty times more powerful that Carbon dioxide (CO2).