No, it is very polar.
Hydrogen gas, H2, is nonpolar because both hydrogen atoms have the same electronegativity, so the difference in electronegativity is 0, which means the bond is nonpolar, and since this is the only bond, the gas is nonpolar.
strictly polar
Non of both, potassium fluoride, KF, is ionic
There are two isomers of Ethenediol. One is polar and the other is nonpolar.
No, it is very polar.
Hydrogen gas, H2, is nonpolar because both hydrogen atoms have the same electronegativity, so the difference in electronegativity is 0, which means the bond is nonpolar, and since this is the only bond, the gas is nonpolar.
strictly polar
The fluoride XeF3 is not known; the other xenon fluorides are nonpolar.
Non of both, potassium fluoride, KF, is ionic
Potassium permanganate is a polar compound. This is a salt that has an ionic formula and being polar refers to the type of molecules that are in a compound.
Lipids are nonpolar molecules, meaning they do not have a charge separation and are hydrophobic (repel water). This property is due to their long hydrocarbon chains that lack significant electronegative atoms, making them insoluble in water.
C2H2 (Ethyne or Acetylene) is nonpolar because the molecule has a linear geometry with symmetric electronegativity, resulting in an equal distribution of charge and no net dipole moment.
It's potassium fluorine (fluoride? dunno about the spelling. . . DX) Hope this helps!
KF is Potassium Fluoride
Nonpolar
non polar