A covalent compound may be molecular (for example, benzene), but it doesn't have to be - Quartz (silicon dioxide) is an example of a non-molecular covalent compound.
That compound is methanol and is a molecular compound. All bonds in this compound are covalent.
TNT is a molecular compound.
Its a molecular compound held together by covalent bonds. Any compound involving 2 non metals will be a molecular compound held together by covalent bonds.
Yes it is molecular (or covalent) compound
Bromine (molecular Br2) is an covalent compound
That compound is methanol and is a molecular compound. All bonds in this compound are covalent.
It is a molecular (covalent) compound. Present day text books refer to a covalent compound as a molecular compound, as opposed to an ionic one.
TNT is a molecular compound.
Its a molecular compound held together by covalent bonds. Any compound involving 2 non metals will be a molecular compound held together by covalent bonds.
This is a covalent compound.
A molecular covalent compound
Yes it is molecular (or covalent) compound
Bromine (molecular Br2) is an covalent compound
This is an ionic compound.
No, it is covalent (molecular)
Molecular Compound
No, as it consists of two nonmetals it is covalent.