The answer i believe is Non-polar Covalent.
Atoms are same,so no e negativity difference.They share electrons equally.So bond is non polar.
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
Chlorine gas (Cl2) does not contain polar bonds. A bond is polar if the difference in electronegativity between the two atoms are about 0.4 to 1.7. Since the two atoms in the Cl2 bond are the same, the electronegativity difference is 0 and therefore the bond is completely non-polar.
The chemical bond between chlorine and hydrogen is polar covalent.
Polar- chlorine and bromine have different electronegativities.
Non-polar- both atoms have the same electronegativity as they are both chlorine!
The answer i believe is Non-polar Covalent.
A bond between chlorine and bromine, Cl-Br, would be polar covalent.
Atoms are same,so no e negativity difference.They share electrons equally.So bond is non polar.
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
the molecule is non-polar the CH bonds are also non-polar
Chlorine gas (Cl2) does not contain polar bonds. A bond is polar if the difference in electronegativity between the two atoms are about 0.4 to 1.7. Since the two atoms in the Cl2 bond are the same, the electronegativity difference is 0 and therefore the bond is completely non-polar.
it is the compound of non polar covalent bond It is a diatomic molecule of chlorine.
The chemical bond between chlorine and hydrogen is polar covalent.
In the increasing order, they are non polar covalent bond < polar covalent bond < ionic bond.
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.