The hydrogen bond is more stronger than intermolecular interaction(Vanderwaals force)
a hydrogen bond is stronger than van der waals forces
No. Refer to the related link to see a Wikipedia article on van der waal forces.
Hydrogen fluoride as it is a hydrogen bond.
As long as the hydrogen is attached to Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen the bonding will be a hydrogen bond.
The strongest chemical bond is the ionic bond. Ionic bond strengths are greater than covalent bond strengths.answer 2it is known that covalent bond is stronger.
A "hydrogen bond" - a intermolecular force caused by large difference in electronegativity. [Hydrogen has a very low electronegativity whilst Fluorine, Oxygen and Nitrogen all have a very high electronegativity so an electrostatic attraction exists]
yes, they can accept the hydrogen bond with water (they don't have a hydrogen to hydrogen bond with other ketones however.)
water has stronger hydrogen bond
Nope. Ethanoic has a stronger hydrogen bond
no
No, an ionic bond is considerably stronger than a hydrogen bond.
No. A hydrogen bond isn't even an actual bond. It is a form of intermolecular attraction.
A covalent bond involves the sharing of electrons, while hydrogen bonding does not.
I would imagine Hydrogen Bond. It is hydrogen bond because hydrogen fluoride and water have a large dipole. The electronegative atom attracts electrons away from the hydrogen atom leaving the hydrogen atom almost unshielded proton with a partial positive charge.
Hydrogen fluoride as it is a hydrogen bond.
No, hydrogen bonds are weak in comparison to both ionic and covalent bonds.
false***Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. Not a bond.
hydrogen bonding in molecules is stronger
a h-bond is 20 times as strong as a covalent bond