Carbon dioxide is a non-polar molecule containing polar covalent bonds in its atoms.
non-polar molecule
No, silicon dioxide forms a network covalent structure, and so doesn't dissolve in anything:
SiO2, also known as silicon dioxide, is a nonpolar molecule.
It is a non-polar molecule. But it has polar covalent bonds between its atoms
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.
Nonpolar
No. Carbon dioxide has polar bonds, but the molecule as a whole is nonpolar because it is symmetric.
true
nonpolar
Nitrogen gas (N2) is nonpolar because the two nitrogen atoms are identical and share electrons equally due to their equal electronegativity. This balanced sharing of electrons results in a nonpolar molecule.
It is nonpolar
nonpolar