No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
No. A hydrogen bond is actually a type of intramolecular force. This means that when a H atom is bonded to the end of a Fluorine (F), Oxygen (O), or Nitrogen (N), it can attach to another F, O, or N to a create what we call in chemistry, a Hydrogen bond.
Hydrogen bonds can be intermolecular (between molecules) or intramolecular (between the atoms of a molecule).
Presuming you are asking about the intermolecular 'bonds', they are not actual bonds but are instead a weak attractive force between two molecules which have a hydrogen atom bonded to a very electronegative atom (F, O or N). The partially positively charged hydrogen atom is weakly attracted to the partially negatively charged electronegative atom in another molecule.
Hydrogen bonds are weak interactions and hence they help in increasing the boiling point and solubility of some solvents
See here for more information: hydrogen-bond
Hydrogen itself is a chemical element, not a bond.
If you are asking about hydrogen bonds then the answer is no. Hydrogen bonding is an intermolecular force of attraction, not a chemical bond.
Not really, it's more of a particularly strong intermolecular electrostatic interaction than a true bond. Hydrogen bond strengths are on the order of a few kcal/mol, less than a tenth of even a weak covalent bond.
No. Covalent bonds exist within a water molecule. Hydrogen bonds exist between water molecules.
Yes.
An H-bond, or known as hydrogen bond. Hydrogen bonds are attractive bonds, very strong but easy to break. Think of it as someone who has a girlfriend(a strong bond, connected) but is attracted to other girls. A hydrogen bond is not as strong as a covalent or ionic bond(a strong bond).
The hydrogen bond is not strong.
Biologically, hydrogen bonds are considered to be strong intermolecular forces.
The strong Hydrogen Bond needs to be overcome to melt ice. A hydrogen bond is basically a dipole-dipole bond that's really strong (slight negative attracted to slight positive). Remember Hydrogen bonds are H-O, H-N, H-F, so specifically, H-Bonding forces need to be overcome.
No. this is an example of ionic bond, not hydrogen bond
A hydrogen bond is a very strong dipole-dipole bond. A hydrogen bond can only form between hydrogen and a strong electromagnetic atom; fluorine, oxygen or chlorine.
No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
An H-bond, or known as hydrogen bond. Hydrogen bonds are attractive bonds, very strong but easy to break. Think of it as someone who has a girlfriend(a strong bond, connected) but is attracted to other girls. A hydrogen bond is not as strong as a covalent or ionic bond(a strong bond).
It's a strong bond.
The hydrogen bond is not strong.
Covalent bond is a strong chemical bond. Hydrogen bonds are weak bonds.
the bond is strong
Biologically, hydrogen bonds are considered to be strong intermolecular forces.
a hydrogen bond
This depends on the type of bond: ionic bond is strong, hydrogen bond is weak.
No. hydrogen molecule has a strong single bond with a bond dissociation energy of 436 kJ/mol.
false***Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. Not a bond.