It depends.
In an individual molecule, covalent bonds hold the nitrogen atom to the hydrogen atom. This is a type of a intramolecular force and is responsible for holding the atoms in a molecule together.
In a group of NH containing molecules, the force responsible for holding the molecules together is due to is the hydrogen bond. This is a intermolecular force and is responsible for holding the molecules together.
So basically, if the hydrogen and nitrogen are in the same molecule it's not a hydrogen bond and if they're not in the same molecule and there's a still an attraction it is a hydrogen bond.
Both nitrogen gas (N2) and hydrogen gas (H2) are diatomic molecules. They both have non-polar covalent bonds. However, H2 has a single bond, whereas N2 has a triple bond (and so N2 has a much stronger bond)
Ordinarily hydrogen gas and nitrogen gas do not form bonds. It takes a special process called nitrogen fixation to bond three hydrogen atoms to one nitrogen atom, forming ammonia.
There are several ways nitrogen fixation can happen:
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
As long as the hydrogen is attached to Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen the bonding will be a hydrogen bond.
Nitrogen bases bond by the help of covalent or hydrogen bonds
It's called a hydrogen bond. (There's also a vaguely similar concept called a "dipolar" or "dative" bond, but the fact that you've limited it specifically to hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen means that "hydrogen bond" is almost certainly the term you're looking for.)
No, Nitrogen TriFluoride has dipole-dipole forces
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
It is not a hydrogen bond if they are in same molecule.But H bond forms between them.
Hydrogen bond
hydrogen bond
The question makes no sense. There's no such thing as a "nitrogen bond". If you mean "nitrogen atoms", then there are no hydrogen bonds between nitrogen atoms. If you mean "hydrogen bonds between a hydrogen and a nitrogen", then they break like any other hydrogen bond; they aren't really "bonds", just relatively strong electrostatic forces.
The hydrogen bond is a bond between two electronegative atoms, specifically oxygen or nitrogen. Thus to hydrogen bond, an electronegative atom is connected.
Hydrogen
As long as the hydrogen is attached to Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen the bonding will be a hydrogen bond.
Nitrogen, Oxygen and Fluorine
A hydrogen bond is the strongest type of intermolecular forces. It occurs whenever there is a bond between hydrogen and either fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen.
Nitrogen bases bond by the help of covalent or hydrogen bonds
no