No, hydrogen bonds are weak in comparison to both ionic and covalent bonds.
No, an ionic bond is considerably stronger than a hydrogen bond.
Disulfide bond is a covalent bond and the relative strength of bond types is as follows:Covalent > Ionic > Hydrogen > Van der Walls forcesTherefore, disulfide bond is stronger than ionic bond
If you mean is the bond in hydrogen gas, H2 ionic then the answer is no.
ionic
ionic bond!
Ionic bonds are far stronger than hydrogen bonds. Ice is held together by hydrogen bonds, and table salt, which is sodium chloride (NaCl), is held together by ionic bonds. You can hammer on ice and break the hydrogen bonds holding it together with relative ease. But you can hammer all day on salt, turn it to a white powder, and not break the sodium-chlorine bonds (those ionic bonds) in any molecules of salt by doing so.
Ionic
It is not covalent, because it is the strongest type. The Correct answer is van der Waals.
Lithium has a much lower electronegativity than hydrogen, therefore it forms a much stronger, ionic bond, and hydrogen forms a weaker covalent bond with oxygen.
The bond between hydrogen and fluorine is not a covalent bond. When hydrogen bonds with oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine, then it is called a hydrogen bond. Hydrogen bonds will be stronger than a regular covalent bond, so the electronegativity difference will be higher.
water has stronger hydrogen bond
A hydrogen bond is one type of chemical bond, so the question is somewhat misguided. In general it is weaker than the three types of bond we learn first, ionic, covalent and metallic bonds.