Carbon hydrogen trichloride, more commonly called trichloromethane or chloroform is polar.
carbon-hydrogen bonds of alkanes are not polar.
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.
Fluorine and hydrogen
Carbon to fluorine.
The bond in boron trichloride, BCl3, is polar covalent.
carbon-hydrogen bonds of alkanes are not polar.
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.
Bonds between carbon and hydrogen are non-polar.
The bond between carbon and hydrogen is covalent, in which carbon and hydrogen share a pair of electrons.
Fluorine and hydrogen
Sodium iodide has ionic bonds, which are always polar. Carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas both have molecular (covalent) bonds; the ones in carbon dioxide are polar and those in elemental hydrogen molecules (H2) are nonpolar.
Carbon to fluorine.
yes
The covalent bond between carbon and hydrogen is NON-POLAR.
a non polar amino acid is if it has 1 carbon and 3 hydrogen
The bond in boron trichloride, BCl3, is polar covalent.
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.