A carbon-oxygen bond is more polar than a carbon-hydrogen bond, because the difference in electronegativity between carbon and oxygen is greater than the difference in electronegativity between carbon and hydrogen.
It is a non-polar covalent bond. O - C - O The oxygen atoms have a delta- charge, and the carbon a delta+ charge. Because the negative charges pull the electron cloud into different directions, it has no side which is more electronegative than the other. Therefore it is a non-polar covalent bond.
C-O is more polar than C=O because C=O has another pi bond in addition to the sigma bond. This would chip away at oxygen's electron density because it requires oxygen to share a part of its electrons to make the pi bond. C-O on the other hand has no such restrictions.
N2 exists with a triple bond between them. Ballpark it by mulitplying the single bond energy by 3. You see that it is much stronger than CO THIS ANSWER IS WRONG! carbon monoxide has a triple bond also. BUT the n triple bond is not polar. the co triple bond features an electronegative oxygen atom and the carbon has a negative charge. hence much more reactive.
Because oxygen is much more electronegative than carbon, the bonding in CO (carbon monoxide) is a polar covalent.
A carbon-oxygen bond is more polar than a carbon-hydrogen bond, because the difference in electronegativity between carbon and oxygen is greater than the difference in electronegativity between carbon and hydrogen.
Yes it does, with partial negative charges on oxygen, as oxygen is more electronegative than carbon.
The chemical bond between carbon-chlorine has an electronegativity difference of 0.61. The bond between carbon-hydrogen has a difference of 0.35, thus is less polar than the carbon-chlorine bond.
The fluorenone is more polar because it belongs to the ketone family. The fluorene is an aromatic molecule without polar fonction and this is not the case of the fluorenone, it contains a carbonyl fonction (carbon-double bond-oxygen).
It is a non-polar covalent bond. O - C - O The oxygen atoms have a delta- charge, and the carbon a delta+ charge. Because the negative charges pull the electron cloud into different directions, it has no side which is more electronegative than the other. Therefore it is a non-polar covalent bond.
the Oxygen-Fluorine bond is polar, as the fluorine is more electronegative than the Oxygen, the Fluorine would be the negative side
C-O is more polar than C=O because C=O has another pi bond in addition to the sigma bond. This would chip away at oxygen's electron density because it requires oxygen to share a part of its electrons to make the pi bond. C-O on the other hand has no such restrictions.
A carbon-chlorine bond would be covalent but chlorine is more electronegative than carbon so the bond would be polar.
N2 exists with a triple bond between them. Ballpark it by mulitplying the single bond energy by 3. You see that it is much stronger than CO THIS ANSWER IS WRONG! carbon monoxide has a triple bond also. BUT the n triple bond is not polar. the co triple bond features an electronegative oxygen atom and the carbon has a negative charge. hence much more reactive.
Polar See the Related Questions to the left for more information about how to determine if a molecule is polar or non-polar.
Because oxygen is much more electronegative than carbon, the bonding in CO (carbon monoxide) is a polar covalent.
Because oxygen has a higher electronegativity (stronger affinity for electrons) than carbon. Oxygen therefore gains a partially negative charge because the negative electrons spend more time around the oxygen atom. This leads to uneqaul sharing and the formation of a polar covalent bond.